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EE Devices Seminar- Nader Engheta, U of Pennsylvania

Friday, November 14, 2025
3:00pm to 4:00pm
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Moore B270
Near-Zero-Index Optics

Materials are often used to manipulate and control photons. Metamaterials -- judiciously engineered material structures -- have enabled scientists and engineers to construct platforms with unconventional material parameters, providing exciting opportunities for optical and microwave devices and components. One such platform is the near-zero-index metamaterials. In such structures, the effective relative permittivity and/or relative permeability is designed to be near zero at operating frequencies, causing the effective refractive index to be near zero. Consequently, in such epsilon-near-zero (ENZ), mu-near-zero (MNZ), and/or near-zero-index (NZI) structures the wavelength is "stretched", and therefore the phase distribution is effectively uniform throughout this volume. This leads to a variety of unique features in wave physics, including supercoupling, photonic doping, photonic surface states, electric levitation, extreme quantum optics, thermal beaming, and giant nonlinearity, just to name a few. In this talk, I will present an overview of some of the fundamental principles and unique physics and engineering of wave interaction with such near-zero-index structures.  I will then discuss some of the applications of such platforms in photonics and microwave technologies.  Possible future directions of research in this field will also be forecasted.

For more information, please contact Caroline Murphy by phone at 626-395-2084 or by email at [email protected].