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The microwave behavior of polymer metacomposites containing parallel Fe-based and continuous/short-cut Co-based microwire arrays has been investigated. A magnetic field-tunable metacomposite feature has been identified in the dense continuous hybrid composite confirmed by the transmission windows in the frequency band of 1 to 3.5 GHz. The complex magnetically tuned redshift-blueshift evolution of the transmission window is reasoned to result from the competition between the dynamic wire-wire interaction and the ferromagnetic resonance of Fe-based wires. Increasing Co-based inter-wire spacing to 10 mm in the continuous hybrid composites, a remarkable dual-band transmission window in the 1.5-3.5 GHz and 9-17 GHz is respectively induced by the ferromagnetic resonance of Fe-based wires and the magnetic resonance arising between Fe-Co wire couples. The hybridization of parallel Fe-based and short-cut Co-based wires in the polymer composite leads to a significant enhancement of the transmission window in the frequency band of 1 to 6 GHz due to the band-stop nature of Co-based wires. The advanced hybridized microwire metacomposites are arguably demonstrated to be particularly attractive for microwave cloaking and radio frequency barcoding applications.
Traditional approaches to realize microwave tunability in microwire polymer composites which mainly rely on topological factors, magnetic field/stress stimuli, and hybridization prove to be burdensome and restricted to rather narrow band frequencies.
We investigated the microwave properties of polymer based metacomposites containing hybridized parallel Fe- and Co-based microwire arrays. A dual-band left-handed feature was observed in the frequency bands of 1.5 to 5.5 GHz and 9 to 17 GHz, indicate
We report measurements of the low temperature (T = 0.5 K) oscillatory magnetization in a high-density array of 50 micron diameter wires of polycrystalline Bi utilizing a high sensitivity silicon cantilever magnetometer. We find that the magnetic resp
The acoustic cloaking theory of Norris (2008) permits considerable freedom in choosing the transformation function f from physical to virtual space. The standard process for defining cloak materials is to first define f and then evaluate whether the
Flexible magnetic devices, i.e., magnetic devices fabricated on flexible substrates, are very attractive in application of detecting magnetic field in arbitrary surface, non-contact actuators, and microwave devices due to the stretchable, biocompatib