JoVE Logo

Sign In

A subscription to JoVE is required to view this content. Sign in or start your free trial.

In This Article

  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Protocol
  • Results
  • Discussion
  • Disclosures
  • Acknowledgements
  • Materials
  • References
  • Reprints and Permissions

Summary

Metamaterials at terahertz frequencies offer unique opportunities, but are challenging to fabricate in bulk. We adapt the fabrication procedure for microstructured polymer optical fibers to inexpensively fabricate metamaterials potentially on an industrial scale. We produce polymethylmethacrylate fibers containing ~10 μm diameter indium wires separated by ~100 μm, which exhibit a terahertz plasmonic response.

Abstract

Metamaterials are man-made composite materials, fabricated by assembling components much smaller than the wavelength at which they operate 1. They owe their electromagnetic properties to the structure of their constituents, instead of the atoms that compose them. For example, sub-wavelength metal wires can be arranged to possess an effective electric permittivity that is either positive or negative at a given frequency, in contrast to the metals themselves 2. This unprecedented control over the behaviour of light can potentially lead to a number of novel devices, such as invisibility cloaks 3, negative refractive index materials 4, and lenses that resolve objects below the diffraction limit 5. However, metamaterials operating at optical, mid-infrared and terahertz frequencies are conventionally made using nano- and micro-fabrication techniques that are expensive and produce samples that are at most a few centimetres in size 6-7. Here we present a fabrication method to produce hundreds of meters of metal wire metamaterials in fiber form, which exhibit a terahertz plasmonic response 8. We combine the stack-and-draw technique used to produce microstructured polymer optical fiber 9 with the Taylor-wire process 10, using indium wires inside polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) tubes. PMMA is chosen because it is an easy to handle, drawable dielectric with suitable optical properties in the terahertz region; indium because it has a melting temperature of 156.6 °C which is appropriate for codrawing with PMMA. We include an indium wire of 1 mm diameter and 99.99% purity in a PMMA tube with 1 mm inner diameter (ID) and 12 mm outside diameter (OD) which is sealed at one end. The tube is evacuated and drawn down to an outer diameter of 1.2 mm. The resulting fiber is then cut into smaller pieces, and stacked into a larger PMMA tube. This stack is sealed at one end and fed into a furnace while being rapidly drawn, reducing the diameter of the structure by a factor of 10, and increasing the length by a factor of 100. Such fibers possess features on the micro- and nano- scale, are inherently flexible, mass-producible, and can be woven to exhibit electromagnetic properties that are not found in nature. They represent a promising platform for a number of novel devices from terahertz to optical frequencies, such as invisible fibers, woven negative refractive index cloths, and super-resolving lenses.

Protocol

Overview

The composite indium/PMMA fiber (Figure 3) is produced by drawing a stack of PMMA fibers including a single indium wire (Figure 2), which themselves have to be prepared from available PMMA tubes and wires. The steps presented are:

  1. Produce a PMMA fiber that contains a single indium wire of diameter appropriate for manual stacking. For this, first prepare a PMMA tube that can accommodate a 1 mm indium wire (Section 1), then include the indium and draw to the required size (Section 2).
  2. Stack and draw the obtained individual indium-filled PMMA fibers (Section 3) to the required size.

Sections 4 and 5 detail the drawing processes used in sections 2 and 3.

1. Fabricating the PMMA Jacketing Tube

The PMMA jacketing tube used to structure the 1 mm indium wire is made by stretching and sleeving standard PMMA tubes in the primary draw process (Section 4) to make a final PMMA jacketing tube of ID 1 mm and OD 12 mm.

  1. Cut PMMA tubes with ID of 6mm and OD of 12 mm to 600 mm lengths. Several PMMA tubes should be prepared for future use during the sleeving process.
  2. Anneal the PMMA tubes in an annealing oven at 90 °C for a minimum of 5 days.
  3. Remove one PMMA tube from annealing oven and allow it to cool to room temperature.
  4. Clean the surface of the PMMA tube with isopropanol wipes and allow to dry.
  5. Attach the PMMA tube to top extender (Figure 6) using reflective tape (Figure 7).
  6. Attach the PMMA tube to primary draw bottom extender (Figure 6) using reflective tape (Figure 8).
  7. Stretch the PMMA tube in the primary drawing process (refer to Section 4). Note that no vacuum is required for this stage. The PMMA tube is stretched from OD 12 mm to 6 mm.
  8. Remove the stretched tube from the draw tower after drawing.
  9. Cut the stretched tube into 550 mm lengths.
  10. Repeat steps 1.3 and 1.4.
  11. Heat the top side of the stretched tube with a hot air gun until the material softens and crimp seal the hole using pliers (Figure 9).
  12. Insert the stretched tube into the new PMMA tube to create the PMMA tube assembly (Figure 10). On bottom side of the PMMA tube assembly (i.e. the side which has the inner stretched tube open), wrap polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) tape as shown in Figure 10, to seal the gap between the stretched tube and the new PMMA tube.
  13. Attach top end of the PMMA tube assembly (i.e. the side which has the inner stretched tube sealed) to the top extender (Figure 7), using an inner layer of sticky tape, a middle layer of PTFE tape, and an outer layer of reflective tape. Ensure the PTFE tape is tight and all gaps between the PMMA tube assembly and the top extender are sealed.
  14. Attach the PMMA tube to the primary draw bottom extender as shown in 1.6.
  15. Stretch and sleeve the PMMA tube assembly in the primary drawing process with vacuum (refer to Section 4). The PMMA tube assembly is stretched from OD 12 mm to 6 mm.
  16. The resulting stretched PMMA jacketing tube will have ID/OD of approximately 0.25. Repeat 1.9 to 1.15 until the final PMMA jacketing tube has ID/OD of approximately 0.1 with an ID of 1 mm (Figure 1).

2. Fabricating the Indium Filled Fiber

The 1 mm indium wire is sleeved and stretched in the PMMA jacketing tube made in Section 1 using the secondary draw process (Section 5) to produce indium filled fiber with a final OD 1.2 mm.

  1. Prepare and anneal PMMA jacketing tubes as shown in 1.1 - 1.4.
  2. Cut the indium wire to 550 mm lengths.
  3. Insert indium wire into the PMMA jacketing tube to create the indium filled preform assembly as shown in Figure 11.
  4. Seal the bottom side of the PMMA jacketing tube as shown in 1.11.
  5. Attach indium filled preform assembly to the top extender as shown in 1.13 and the secondary draw bottom extender as shown in 1.14.
  6. Stretch and sleeve the indium filled preform assembly in the secondary drawing process with vacuum to make indium filled fiber (refer to Section 5) of a final OD 1 mm drawn under 15-20 g tension.
  7. Remove the spool of indium filled fiber from the tower after the draw process is finished.
  8. Inspect the endface and along the longitudinal length of the indium filled fiber using a light microscope. Problematic defects can include separation between the indium wire and PMMA tubing interface, fluctuations in the wire diameter or fracture cracks along the length of the fiber. Optical microscope images of the indium filled fiber are presented in Figure 2, showing a continuous 100 μm indium wire in a 1 mm OD PMMA fiber.
  9. Repeat 2.1 to 2.8 until enough indium filled fiber is produced for the indium stacked preform.

3. Fabricating the Indium Stacked Fiber

The indium stacked fiber is fabricated by first stacking the indium filled fibers produced in Secton 2 in a larger PMMA preform jacketing tube, which is then stretched and sleeved to the desired fiber dimensions using the secondary draw process (Section 5).

  1. Prepare the PMMA preform jacketing tube as shown in 1.1. For demonstration purposes, we will use a PMMA tube of 12 mm OD and 9 mm ID.
  2. Cut the indium filled fibers to 550 mm length.
  3. Clean the surface of the PMMA preform jacketing tube and the indium filled fiber with isopropanol wipes and allow to dry.
  4. Bundle the indium filled fiber using rubber bands and insert into the PMMA preform jacketing tube, ensuring the fibers are straight and are of a tight fit (Figure 12).
  5. Anneal the stacked preform assembly in the annealing oven at 90 °C for a minimum of 5 days.
  6. Remove the stacked preform assembly from the annealing oven and allow it to cool to room temperature.
  7. Attach indium filled preform assembly to the top extender as shown in 1.13 and the secondary draw bottom extender as shown in 1.14.
  8. Stretch and sleeve the stacked preform assembly in the secondary drawing process with vacuum to make indium stacked fiber (refer to Section 5). This is stretched to a final OD 0.6 mm drawn under 80 g tension, producing a metamaterial fiber containing 5 mm wires separated by 50 μm. An optical microscope cross-sectional image of the resulting fiber is shown in Figure 3.
  9. Remove the spool of indium stacked fiber from the tower after the draw process is finished.
  10. Inspect the endface and along the longitudinal length of the indium stacked fiber as shown in 2.8 (Figure 3).

4. Primary Draw Process

The primary draw process is used to stretch preforms to outer diameters greater than 1 mm. The following procedure is used in Section 1: Fabricating the PMMA Jacketing Tube.

  1. Load the preform onto the draw tower by clamping the top extender to the three jaw chuck. Feed the preform into the hot zone of the furnace (Figure 13). Align the preform using the XY micrometer stage. Close the top plate of the furnace.
  2. The pre-heat stage elevates the temperature of the cross sectional area of the preform to the drawing temperature, using the temperature profile shown in Figure 14.
  3. Commence the drawing process by increasing the temperature to 185 °C, starting the feed rate at 5 mm/min, draw rate at 6 mm/min and closing the draw unit clamps. Examine the behaviour of draw tension over time (Figure 15).
    • If the tension increases exponentially, stop the feed and draw units, wait 1 min to allow the preform to heat up to drawing temperature, before starting the feed and draw units again. Repeat the test until the tension stabilizes.
    • If the tension falls, increase the draw rate by 1-2 mm/min. Continue increasing the draw rate in 1-2 mm/min increments (as long as the tension either remains constant or starts falling), until the required draw rate is achieved.
  4. If vacuum is required, attach the vacuum tube to the vacuum sealed top preform extender using Blu-Tac (Figure 13). Turn on the vacuum after the feed and draw units have started to ensure the preform is drawing symmetrically.
  5. Use the primary drawing condition in Table 1 as a guide when drawing the preform. Note the furnace temperature and the ratio between the feed and draw rate have to be monitored to maintain constant OD and the drawing tension. Note that an indicative outer diameter for the drawn fiber can be obtained from a mass balance equation,
    Dfinal = Dstart (F/D)1/2
    where Dfinal- is the final fiber diameter, Dstart is the initial preform diameter, F is the feed rate, and D is the draw rate. Stop the feeding and drawing rate and switch of the furnace when the preform is finished. Remove the preform from the draw tower once the preform cools to room temperature.

5. Secondary Draw Process

The secondary draw process is used to stretch preforms to ODs smaller than 1 mm. The following procedure is used in Section 2: Fabricating the indium filled fiber and 3: Fabricating the indium stacked fiber.

  1. Loading the preform for the secondary draw is the same as in the primary draw process (Step 4.1).
  2. The pre-heating stage for the secondary draw is the same as in the primary draw process (Step 4.2).
  3. The preform begins to neck-down once the drawing temperature is reached. The drop-down of the preform exits the bottom of the furnace due to the weight of the bottom extender providing the initial drawing force (Figure 16).
  4. Start the feed rate (2.5 - 5 mm/min) and start increasing the furnace temperature (2.5 - 5 °C) to control the speed of the drop-down. The fiber diameter should be maintained around 250 - 500 μm to prevent the fiber snapping.
  5. Attach the fiber to the capstan wheel that is spinning at a slow rate of under 1 m/min initially. Wind the fiber around the dancer wheels and attach to the fiber spool.
  6. If vacuum is required attach the vacuum tube as shown in 4.4.
  7. The fiber draw will initially be under transient draw conditions. Set the feed rate, draw rate and furnace temperature to the desired draw condition values. Fiber diameter and draw tension will fluctuate until steady state is achieved after a few minutes.
  8. Use the secondary drawing condition in Table 2 as a guide when drawing the preform. Note the furnace temperature and the ratio between the feed and draw rate have to be monitored to maintain constant OD and the drawing tension.
  9. Stop the process as shown in 4.5.

Results

Metamaterial fibers were produced using the technique described. They was assembled from a preform of 1 mm PMMA fibers containing 100 μm diameter continuous indium wires, shown in Figure 2, which in turn had themselves been drawn from a preform of 1 mm indium wires contained inside a 10 mm polymer jacket, which was produced by sleeving appropriately sized polymer tubes, as shown in the schematic of Figure 1. A microscope image of the cross section of an example of a metamaterial fiber...

Discussion

The technique presented here allows the fabrication of kilometers of continuous three-dimensional metamaterials with microscale feature sizes, possessing a plasmonic response (and thus a tailored electric permittivity) in the THz range, effectively behaving as a high-pass filter. This can be experimentally characterized using terahertz time-domain spectroscopy 11. Such fiber-shaped metamaterials can be cut and stacked into bulk materials to realize a large number of devices, or woven into other structures, for...

Disclosures

No conflicts of interest declared.

Acknowledgements

This research was supported under Australian Research Council's Discovery Projects funding scheme (project number DP120103942). B. T. K. and A. A. are the recipients of an Australian Research Council Future Fellowship (FT0991895) and Australian Research Fellowship (DP1093789) respectively.

Materials

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
Indium 99.99% Wire, 1 mm diameterAIM SpecialtyAvailable on requestwww.aimspecialty.com
http://www.aimspecialty.com/Portals/0/Files/Indium.pdf
2-Propanol(Isopropanol)Sigma-AldrichProduct Number
190764
http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/chemistry/solvents/products.html?TablePage=17292086
Adhesive tapeStaples
One Wrap PTFE Tape, 5 ml x 12 mmW x 0.2 mmTRS ComponentsRS Stock Number
231-964
http://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/ptfe-tapes/0231964/
50 Micron Aluminium Foil TapeAdvance Adhesive TapesAT506http://www.advancetapes.com/Products/types/9/page1/81
Blu-takBostikhttp://www.blutack.com/index.html
Araldite Quick SetSelleyshttp://selleys.com.au/adhesives/household-adhesive/araldite/quick-set
PMMA tubes:
- ID 6 mm, OD 12 mm
- ID 9 mm, OD 12 mm
B M Plastics: Plastic FabricationAvailable on requesthttp://www.bmplastics.com.au/about-us.htm
Equipment Requirements
  • Fibre draw tower with furnaces of maximum temperatures of at least 200 °C (Heathway Polymer Draw Tower with Preform and Fibre draw facilities). A photograph of the draw tower is shown in Figure 5.
  • Annealing oven of maximum temperatures of at least 90 °C.
  • Optical microscope.
  • Hot air gun.
  • Vacuum pump.
  • Top preform extender (metal tube of 30 cm length and 12 mm diameter).
  • Primary draw bottom extender (metal tube of 100 cm length and 12 mm diameter).
  • Secondary draw bottom extender (PMMA tube of 20 cm length and 12 mm diameter).

References

  1. Cai, W., Shalaev, V. . Optical Metamaterials: Fundamentals and Applications. , (2010).
  2. Pendry, J. B., Holden, A. J. Extremely Low Frequency Plasmons in Metallic Mesostructures. Phys. Rev. Lett. 76, 4773-4776 (1996).
  3. Schurig, D., Mock, J. J. Metamaterial Electromagnetic Cloak at Microwave Frequencies. Science. 314, 977-980 (2006).
  4. Shalaev, V. M. Optical negative-index metamaterials. Nat. Photonics. 1, 41-48 (2007).
  5. Liu, Z., Lee, H. Far-field optical hyperlens magnifying sub-diffraction-limited objects. Science. 315, (2007).
  6. Boltasseva, A., Shalaev, V. M. Fabrication of optical negative-index metamaterials: Recent advances and outlook. Metamaterials. 2, 1-17 (2008).
  7. Soukoulis, C. M., Wegener, M. Past achievements and future challenges in the development of three-dimensional photonic metamaterials. Nat. Photonics. 5, 523-530 (2011).
  8. Tuniz, A., Kuhlmey, B. T. Drawn metamaterials with plasmonic response at terahertz frequencies. Appl. Phys. Lett. 96, 191101 (2010).
  9. Argyros, A. Microstructured polymer optical fibers. J. Lightwave Technol. 27, 1571-1579 (2009).
  10. Donald, I. W. Production, properties and applications of microwire and related products. J. Mater. Sci. 22, 2661-2679 (1987).
  11. Grischkowsky, D., Keiding, S. Far-infrared time-domain spectroscopy with terahertz beams of dielectrics and semiconductors. J. Opt. Soc. Am. B. 7, 2006-2015 (1990).
  12. Wang, A., Tuniz, A. Fiber metamaterials with negative magnetic permeability in the terahertz. Opt. Mat. Express. 1, 115-120 (2010).
  13. Tuniz, A., Lwin, R. Stacked-and-drawn metamaterials with magnetic resonances in the terahertz range. Opt. Express. 19, 16480-16490 (2011).

Reprints and Permissions

Request permission to reuse the text or figures of this JoVE article

Request Permission

Explore More Articles

MetamaterialsFiber Drawing MethodComposite MaterialsElectromagnetic PropertiesSub wavelength Metal WiresEffective Electric PermittivityNovel DevicesInvisibility CloaksNegative Refractive Index MaterialsLensesDiffraction LimitOptical FrequenciesMid infrared FrequenciesTerahertz FrequenciesNano fabrication TechniquesMicro fabrication TechniquesExpensiveCentimetres In SizeFabrication MethodMetal Wire MetamaterialsFiber FormTerahertz Plasmonic ResponseStack and draw TechniqueMicrostructured Polymer Optical FiberTaylor wire ProcessIndium Wires

This article has been published

Video Coming Soon

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved