2012
DOI: 10.1103/physrevb.86.201106
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Surface scattering and band gaps in rough waveguides and nanowires

Abstract: The boundaries of waveguides and nanowires have drastic influence on their coherent scattering properties. Designing the boundary profile is thus a promising approach for transmission and band-gap engineering with many applications. By performing an experimental study of microwave transmission through rough waveguides we demonstrate that a recently proposed surface scattering theory can be employed to predict the measured transmission properties from the boundary profiles and vice versa. A new key ingredient o… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…In particular, by imposing specific long-range correlations one can practically create the devices with given transmission/reflection characteristics. This effect of enhancement or suppression of the Anderson localization was recently observed experimentally in waveguides with both the bulk [10] or surface [11] correlated disorder. It should be stressed that specific long-range correlations can emerge naturally in physical systems, not only in systems with intentionally included correlations; one such example will be discussed in this paper.New perspectives in creating devices with unusual transport characteristics are related to specific optic properties of metamaterials embedded in periodic structures [12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22].…”
supporting
confidence: 59%
“…In particular, by imposing specific long-range correlations one can practically create the devices with given transmission/reflection characteristics. This effect of enhancement or suppression of the Anderson localization was recently observed experimentally in waveguides with both the bulk [10] or surface [11] correlated disorder. It should be stressed that specific long-range correlations can emerge naturally in physical systems, not only in systems with intentionally included correlations; one such example will be discussed in this paper.New perspectives in creating devices with unusual transport characteristics are related to specific optic properties of metamaterials embedded in periodic structures [12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22].…”
supporting
confidence: 59%
“… used in different contexts (see, e.g., [33][34][35]) is restricted to Gaussian random processes and cannot be applied for the present step-like surface profiles. Indeed, as we will see below, this simplification would lead to a severe underestimation of the SGS mechanism in the present context.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Also note that we have used ensemble averaging for the derivation of the above equations (10) and (11) (to ensure convergence of equation (A.3) in the appendix) [40]. Recent work demonstrates, however, that an application of the predictions following from the two different correlators above also yields good quantitative agreement for individual disorder realizations as in single disordered waveguides [33].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A simple measurement of the scattering matrix (or a subpart of it) at neighboring frequencies [27] yields the time-delay matrix from which particle-like state inputs can be extracted. Such a measurement can be routinely performed through 3D scattering media whether it be in optics [6,12], in the microwave regime [13,35] or in acoustics [33,34]. As to the generation of particle-like wave packets, multi-element technology is a powerful tool for the coherent control of acoustic waves and electromagnetic waves [60].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This highly dimension S-matrix relates any arbitrary wave-field at the input to the output of the scattering medium, and in principle, allows the reconstruction or prediction of either. It fully describes wave propagation across a scattering medium and can meanwhile be routinely measured not only in acoustics [33,34], but also in microwave technology [13,35] and optics [6,12]. The sub-blocks of the scattering matrix contain the complex-valued transmission (t, t ) and reflection (r, r ) matrices with a certain number N of input and output channels, S = r t t r .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%