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Dive into the research topics where Guy Lipworth is active.

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Featured researches published by Guy Lipworth.


Science | 2013

Metamaterial Apertures for Computational Imaging

John Hunt; Tom Driscoll; Alex Mrozack; Guy Lipworth; Matthew S. Reynolds; David J. Brady; David R. Smith

Compressed Sampling It is often said that a picture is worth a thousand words. But images often contain a lot of redundant information—effectively creating huge data files of meaningless information. While algorithms can compress the size of a file without loss of information, such processing is done after the picture has been taken. Hunt et al. (p. 310) used a metamaterial sensor to compress the sampled scene directly, obviating the need for postprocessing. Tuning the response of the metamaterial allowed imaging of a scene with a 40:1 compression ratio, which may mean that finding that needle in a haystack may be much easier using a metamaterial camera. Metamaterial-based sensors can be used for compressive image reconstruction. By leveraging metamaterials and compressive imaging, a low-profile aperture capable of microwave imaging without lenses, moving parts, or phase shifters is demonstrated. This designer aperture allows image compression to be performed on the physical hardware layer rather than in the postprocessing stage, thus averting the detector, storage, and transmission costs associated with full diffraction-limited sampling of a scene. A guided-wave metamaterial aperture is used to perform compressive image reconstruction at 10 frames per second of two-dimensional (range and angle) sparse still and video scenes at K-band (18 to 26 gigahertz) frequencies, using frequency diversity to avoid mechanical scanning. Image acquisition is accomplished with a 40:1 compression ratio.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 2013

Metamaterial apertures for coherent computational imaging on the physical layer

Guy Lipworth; Alex Mrozack; John Hunt; Daniel L. Marks; Tom Driscoll; David J. Brady; David R. Smith

We introduce the concept of a metamaterial aperture, in which an underlying reference mode interacts with a designed metamaterial surface to produce a series of complex field patterns. The resonant frequencies of the metamaterial elements are randomly distributed over a large bandwidth (18-26 GHz), such that the aperture produces a rapidly varying sequence of field patterns as a function of the input frequency. As the frequency of operation is scanned, different subsets of metamaterial elements become active, in turn varying the field patterns at the scene. Scene information can thus be indexed by frequency, with the overall effectiveness of the imaging scheme tied to the diversity of the generated field patterns. As the quality (Q-) factor of the metamaterial resonators increases, the number of distinct field patterns that can be generated increases-improving scene estimation. In this work we provide the foundation for computational imaging with metamaterial apertures based on frequency diversity, and establish that for resonators with physically relevant Q-factors, there are potentially enough distinct measurements of a typical scene within a reasonable bandwidth to achieve diffraction-limited reconstructions of physical scenes.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Magnetic metamaterial superlens for increased range wireless power transfer.

Guy Lipworth; Joshua F. Ensworth; Kushal Seetharam; Da Huang; Jae Seung Lee; Paul Schmalenberg; Tsuyoshi Nomura; Matthew S. Reynolds; David R. Smith; Yaroslav A. Urzhumov

The ability to wirelessly power electrical devices is becoming of greater urgency as a component of energy conservation and sustainability efforts. Due to health and safety concerns, most wireless power transfer (WPT) schemes utilize very low frequency, quasi-static, magnetic fields; power transfer occurs via magneto-inductive (MI) coupling between conducting loops serving as transmitter and receiver. At the “long range” regime – referring to distances larger than the diameter of the largest loop – WPT efficiency in free space falls off as (1/d)6; power loss quickly approaches 100% and limits practical implementations of WPT to relatively tight distances between power source and device. A “superlens”, however, can concentrate the magnetic near fields of a source. Here, we demonstrate the impact of a magnetic metamaterial (MM) superlens on long-range near-field WPT, quantitatively confirming in simulation and measurement at 13–16 MHz the conditions under which the superlens can enhance power transfer efficiency compared to the lens-less free-space system.


Progress in Electromagnetics Research-pier | 2015

Resolution of the Frequency Diverse Metamaterial Aperture Imager

Okan Yurduseven; Mohammadreza F. Imani; Hayrettin Odabasi; Jonah N. Gollub; Guy Lipworth; Alec Rose; David R. Smith

The resolution of a frequency diverse compressive metamaterial aperture imager is investigated. The aperture consists of a parallel plate waveguide, in which an array of complementary, resonant metamaterial elements is patterned into one of the plates. Microwaves injected into the waveguide leak out through the resonant metamaterial elements, forming a spatially diverse waveform at the scene. As the frequency is scanned, the waveforms change, such that scene information can be encoded onto a set of frequency measurements. The compressive nature of the metamaterial imager enables image reconstruction from a significantly reduced number of measurements. We characterize the resolution of this complex aperture by studying the simulated point spread function (PSF) computed using different image reconstruction techniques. We compare the imaging performance of the system with that expected from synthetic aperture radar (SAR) limits.


Applied Optics | 2015

Comprehensive simulation platform for a metamaterial imaging system

Guy Lipworth; Alec Rose; Okan Yurduseven; Vinay R. Gowda; Mohammadreza F. Imani; Hayrettin Odabasi; Parker Trofatter; Jonah N. Gollub; David R. Smith

Recently, a frequency-diverse, metamaterial-based aperture has been introduced in the context of microwave and millimeter wave imaging. The generic form of the aperture is that of a parallel plate waveguide, in which complementary metamaterial elements patterned into the upper plate couple energy from the waveguide mode to the scene. To reliably predict the imaging performance of such an aperture prior to fabrication and experiments, it is necessary to have an accurate forward model that predicts radiation from the aperture, a model for scattering from an arbitrary target in the scene, and a set of image reconstruction approaches that allow scene estimation from an arbitrary set of measurements. Here, we introduce a forward model in which the metamaterial elements are approximated as polarizable magnetic dipoles, excited by the fields propagating within the waveguide. The dipoles used in the model can have arbitrarily assigned polarizability characteristics. Alternatively, fields measured from actual metamaterial samples can be decomposed into a set of effective dipole radiators, allowing the performance of actual samples to be quantitatively modeled and compared with simulated apertures. To confirm the validity of our model, we simulate measurements and scene reconstructions with a virtual multiaperture imaging system operating in the K-band spectrum (18-26.5 GHz) and compare its performance with an experimental system.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Large Metasurface Aperture for Millimeter Wave Computational Imaging at the Human-Scale

Jonah N. Gollub; Okan Yurduseven; Kenneth P. Trofatter; Daniel Arnitz; Mohammadreza F. Imani; Timothy Sleasman; Michael Boyarsky; Alec Rose; Andreas Pedross-Engel; Hayrettin Odabasi; Tomas Zvolensky; Guy Lipworth; David J. Brady; Daniel L. Marks; Matthew S. Reynolds; David R. Smith

We demonstrate a low-profile holographic imaging system at millimeter wavelengths based on an aperture composed of frequency-diverse metasurfaces. Utilizing measurements of spatially-diverse field patterns, diffraction-limited images of human-sized subjects are reconstructed. The system is driven by a single microwave source swept over a band of frequencies (17.5–26.5 GHz) and switched between a collection of transmit and receive metasurface panels. High fidelity image reconstruction requires a precise model for each field pattern generated by the aperture, as well as the manner in which the field scatters from objects in the scene. This constraint makes scaling of computational imaging systems inherently challenging for electrically large, coherent apertures. To meet the demanding requirements, we introduce computational methods and calibration approaches that enable rapid and accurate imaging performance.


Optics Express | 2012

Performance of a three dimensional transformation-optical-flattened Lüneburg lens.

Tom Driscoll; Guy Lipworth; Jack Hunt; Nathan Ingle Landy; Nathan Kundtz; D. N. Basov; David R. Smith

We demonstrate both the beam-forming and imaging capabilities of an X-band (8-12 GHz) operational Lüneburg lens, one side of which has been flattened via a coordinate transformation optimized using quasi-conformal transformation optics (QCTO) procedures. Our experimental investigation includes benchmark performance comparisons between the QCTO Lüneburg lens and a commensurate conventional Lüneburg lens. The QCTO Lüneburg lens is made from a metamaterial comprised of inexpensive plastic and fiberglass, and manufactured using fast and versatile numerically controlled water-jet machining. Looking forward towards the future and advanced TO designs, we discuss inevitable design trade-offs between affordable scalable manufacturing and rigorous adherence to the full TO solution, as well as possible paths to mitigate performance degradation in realizable designs.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2017

An analysis of beamed wireless power transfer in the Fresnel zone using a dynamic, metasurface aperture

David R. Smith; Vinay R. Gowda; Okan Yurduseven; Stéphane Larouche; Guy Lipworth; Yaroslav Urzhumov; Matthew S. Reynolds

Wireless power transfer (WPT) has been an active topic of research, with a number of WPT schemes implemented in the near-field (coupling) and far-field (radiation) regimes. Here, we consider a beamed WPT scheme based on a dynamically reconfigurable source aperture transferring power to receiving devices within the Fresnel region. In this context, the dynamic aperture resembles a reconfigurable lens capable of focusing power to a well-defined spot, whose dimension can be related to a point spread function. The necessary amplitude and phase distribution of the field imposed over the aperture can be determined in a holographic sense, by interfering a hypothetical point source located at the receiver location with a plane wave at the aperture location. While conventional technologies, such as phased arrays, can achieve the required control over phase and amplitude, they typically do so at a high cost; alternatively, metasurface apertures can achieve dynamic focusing with potentially lower cost. We present an ...


Scientific Reports | 2015

Quasi-Static Magnetic Field Shielding Using Longitudinal Mu-Near-Zero Metamaterials.

Guy Lipworth; Joshua F. Ensworth; Kushal Seetharam; Jae Seung Lee; Paul Schmalenberg; Tsuyoshi Nomura; Matthew S. Reynolds; David R. Smith; Yaroslav A. Urzhumov

The control of quasi-static magnetic fields is of considerable interest in applications including the reduction of electromagnetic interference (EMI), wireless power transfer (WPT), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The shielding of static or quasi-static magnetic fields is typically accomplished through the use of inherently magnetic materials with large magnetic permeability, such as ferrites, used sometimes in combination with metallic sheets and/or active field cancellation. Ferrite materials, however, can be expensive, heavy and brittle. Inspired by recent demonstrations of epsilon-, mu- and index-near-zero metamaterials, here we show how a longitudinal mu-near-zero (LMNZ) layer can serve as a strong frequency-selective reflector of magnetic fields when operating in the near-field region of dipole-like sources. Experimental measurements with a fabricated LMNZ sheet constructed from an artificial magnetic conductor – formed from non-magnetic, conducting, metamaterial elements – confirm that the artificial structure provides significantly improved shielding as compared with a commercially available ferrite of the same size. Furthermore, we design a structure to shield simultaneously at the fundamental and first harmonic frequencies. Such frequency-selective behavior can be potentially useful for shielding electromagnetic sources that may also generate higher order harmonics, while leaving the transmission of other frequencies unaffected.


IEEE Antennas and Wireless Propagation Letters | 2016

Wireless Power Transfer in the Radiative Near-Field

Vinay R. Gowda; Okan Yurduseven; Guy Lipworth; Tomislav Zupan; Matthew S. Reynolds; David R. Smith

A scheme for wireless power transfer (WPT) in the radiative near-field (Fresnel) region is presented. The proposed Fresnel WPT scheme is designed to focus microwaves to a diffraction-limited region where a detector can be positioned, achieving reasonably high power transfer efficiency over moderate distances. The configuration consists of transmit and receive microstrip patch array antennas, with the receiving antenna connected to a power-harvesting half-wave rectifier (rectenna). Fresnel region operation enables the fields radiated by the transmitting aperture to be localized both in range and cross-range. Using Fresnel region focusing, we achieve an increase of 66.8% in the amount of received power when compared to the performance of a conventional beamforming array. We also demonstrate the efficiency improvement by powering an LED using the on-axis and off-axis focusing configurations.

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