Tuesday, October 29, 2013

A new way of seeing - meta-material lens with ten times more power


http://sydney.edu.au/news/physics/1737.html?newsstoryid=12568

School of Physics researchers have developed a meta-material lens with ten times the resolution of any current lens, making it a powerful new tool for the biological sciences. The results were published in Nature Communications on October 29 2013
Dr Alessandro Tuniz and his team have developed a meta-material lens, a powerful tool for biological science.
Dr Alessandro Tuniz and his team have developed a meta-material lens, a powerful tool for biological science.
"This advance means we can unlock previously inaccessible information on the structure of molecules, their chemical make-up and the presence of certain proteins," said lead author Dr Alessandro Tuniz.
Dr Tuniz, a postdoctoral associate at the University, said, "This opens up an entirely new tool for biological studies. It could allow earlier skin cancer diagnosis, because smaller melanomas can be recognised. For breast cancer, it can also be used to more accurately check that all traces of a tumour have been cut out during surgery."
The four member research team from the University's School of Physics, including Alessandro Tuniz, are all authors on the paper. They created the lens using fibre optic manufacturing technology.
The lens is a metamaterial - a material with completely new properties not found in nature.
The meta-material fibre consisting of a long continuous array of metal microwires
The meta-material fibre consisting of a long continuous array of metal microwires
Making the lens was not a matter of making a better form of the lenses already in existence but of making a lens which uses light waves in a way not previously possible.
"Creating metamaterials is a cutting-edge area of science with a massive range of potential uses from aerospace to solar power, telecommunications to defence," said team member Dr Boris Kuhlmey.
"The major challenge is making these materials on a scale that is useful. This is one of the first times a metamaterial with a real world application, quickly able to be realised, has been feasible. Within the next two to three years, new terahertz microscopes that are ten times more powerful than current ones will be possible using our metamaterial.
"We know of only two or three other cases worldwide, including for wireless internet and MRI applications, where metamaterials could also be put into practice in the next couple of years."
The potential to create a new high power lens, able to see much finer details than using conventional lenses was spotted almost a decade ago. It has taken until now to make the lens on a useful scale, a thousand times smaller than the early experimental models.
"The difficulty was making large quantities of matter structured on a micrometric scale," said Dr Tuniz.
The new lens, made of plastic and metal, uses terahertz waves, electromagnetic waves with frequencies higher than microwaves but lower than infrared radiation and visible light. It operates in a region of the spectrum where very few other optical tools are available and all of them have limitations, in particular in terms of resolution.
"If we think of this in comparison to an X-ray which allows us to see inside objects at a high resolution but with associated danger from radiation, by contrast our metamaterial lens allows us not only to see through some opaque materials, but also to gather information on their chemical composition, and even information on interaction between certain molecules, without the danger of X-rays," said Dr Tuniz.
This means the lens is perfectly suited to analysing the delivery of drugs to cells, which is crucial to medical research.
This research was undertaken with the Freiburg Materials Research Centre from the University of Freiburg and supported by the Australian Research Council, and the Australian National Fabrication Facility using commonwealth and NSW state government funding.

Read the article published in Nature Communications here

Contact: Tom Gordon
Phone: 02 93513201

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