Utilizing a multilayered composite approach, we have designed and constructed a new class of artificial materials for thermal conduction. We show that an engineered material can be utilized to control the diffusive heat flow in ways inconceivable with naturally occurring materials. By shielding, concentrating, and inverting heat current, we experimentally demonstrate the unique potential and the utility of guiding heat flux.
Utilizing a non‐resonant graded material consisting of an array of artificially patterned superconducting and soft ferromagnetic elements, we construct a dc magnetic cloak. When an external dc magnetic field is applied, we find that the interior of the cloak is completely shielded while the exterior field remains unperturbed, as if the cloak and the cloaked region are just an empty space.
We have developed a heat shield based on a metamaterial engineering approach
to shield a region from transient diffusive heat flow. The shield is designed
with a multilayered structure to prescribe the appropriate spatial profile for
heat capacity, density, and thermal conductivity of the effective medium. The
heat shield was experimentally compared to other isotropic materials.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, accepted on Applied Physics Lette
We report a new kind of experiment in which we take an array of nanoscale apertures that form a superfluid (4)He Josephson junction and apply quantum phase gradients directly along the array. We observe collective coherent behaviors from aperture elements, leading to quantum interference. Connections to superconducting and Bose-Einstein condensate Josephson junctions as well as phase coherence among the superfluid aperture array are discussed.
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