1. Schematics of the general fabrication process and experimental setup: Schematics of the fabrication process of each Miura-FSS layer, which consists of the perforation of the modified Miura-Ori pattern, inkjet printing of the dipole elements, and manual folding of the pattern (a). Schematics of the experimental characterization setup (b). The op box shows a side (“plane of incidence”) view of the setup, where angle of incidence (AoI) represents how much the support table was tilted, reflecting the relative angle between the incident waves and the normal to the FSS structure plane. (Source: Georgia Institute of Technology)
(Note that FSSs themselves are not new; they’re used in RF/microwave surfaces to reduce radar cross section (RCS), among other roles. Typically, these FSS structures are fabricated on a thin substrate sheet with an arrangement that can provide bandpass or band-reject characteristics, but with fixed tuning.)
This may seem an obvious idea based on a simple concept, but creative thinking and innovation is needed to implement it. The process began with a special printer that scored the substrate paper, enabling it to be folded. An inkjet printer then added silver ink on both sides of the scored perforations to yield sets of dipole-like elements needed for the RF filtering. One potential problem is that dipoles could break or snap along the fold lines, so they suspended the “inking” at each crossover before continuing onto the other side. Finally, they formed a bridge with a gradual bend via a separate step.
The next issue was what fold pattern to use. The team reached into the world of origami research for a well-known pattern called Miura-Ori (see The Miura-Ori Fold at Natural Origami), which can expand to a flat surface and contracts like an accordion, but yields a minimum-volume package. The filter can even be folded up completely for minimum volume, then extended as needed for a spacecraft, for example.
The Georgia Tech effort went a step further and did not end with this basic filter. By building multilayer or inline-stacked Miura-Ori FSS arrangements, they were able to create higher-order filters as well as filters with different bandwidths (Fig. 2).