Metasurface: Engineering Electromagnetic Wavefronts
Metamaterials was once synonymous with ‘paradigm shift’ and ‘future technology’. In the first decade of the 21st century, metamaterials were sought to solve a large number of problems in microwaves and optics, and rapidly advance industrial, scientific, medical, and military technologies. Yet very few of the initial expectations have come to fruition. This lack of concrete applications led some critics to label metamaterials as an “unearned irony of the improperly educated postmodern crowd”.
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- 161 Warren Street
- Newark, New Jersey
- United States 07102
- Building: ECEC
- Room Number: 202
- Click here for Map
- Contact Event Host
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Dr. Ajay K. Poddar (IEEE MTT-S Region 1 Coordinator & Chapter Chair, Email:akpoddar@ieee.org
Dr. Durgamadhav Misra (IEEE ED/CAS Chapter Chair, email: dmisra@njit.edu)
Dr. Edip Niver (Vice Chair 1 IEEE North Jersey MTT/AP Chapter, email: edip.niver@njit.edu)
MS. Anisha M. Apte (Vice Chair 2, IEEE North Jersey MTT/AP Chapter, email: anisha_apte@ieee.org)
- Co-sponsored by AP/MTT & ED/CAS
Speakers
Dr. Mohamed Salem
Metasurface: Engineering Electromagnetic Wavefronts
Metamaterials was once synonymous with ‘paradigm shift’ and ‘future technology’. In the first decade of the 21st century, metamaterials were sought to solve a large number of problems in microwaves and optics, and rapidly advance industrial, scientific, medical, and military technologies. Yet very few of the initial expectations have come to fruition. This lack of concrete applications led some critics to label metamaterials as an “unearned irony of the improperly educated postmodern crowd”.
This talk sheds some light on the origin behind the initial enthusiasm and the followed disappointment in metamaterial research. The successor of bulk metamaterials, namely metasurfaces, is introduced and the underlying electromagnetic-metasurface interactions are analyzed. A detailed insight is given into metasurface engineering and several realizable applications. An overview of metasurface engineering future roadmap is laid out with pointers to some of the available exciting research and development opportunities
Biography:
Dr. Mohamed Salem is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering Science at Sonoma State University. He received his Ph.D. from New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ in 2009. Prior to joining Sonoma State University, he was a lecturer with the University of Idaho, Moscow, ID. He has several years of postdoctoral experience with Polytechnique Montreal, Montreal, QC and King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), Thuwwal, Saudi Arabia.
Dr. Salem's research focuses on electromagnetic propagation and scattering phenomena and wave-matter interaction. He is particularly interested in metasurface application in wavefront shaping and unconventional waves and beams, such as localized waves
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Agenda
5:30 PM- Refreshments and Networking
6:00PM-7:30 PM: Talk by Dr. Mohamed Salem, Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering Science at Sonoma State University.
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