The Zenneck wave, Zenneck surface wave or Sommerfeld-Zenneck surface wave is a longitudinal, inhomogeneous or non-uniform electromagnetic plane wave incident at the complex Brewster's angle onto a planar or spherical boundary interface between two homogeneous media having different dielectric constants.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]
The Zenneck wave propagates parallel to the interface and decays exponentially vertical to it, a property known as evanescence. It exists under the condition that the permittivity of one of the materials forming the interface is negative, while the other one is positive, as for example the interface between air and a lossy conducting medium such as the terrestrial transmission line, below the plasma frequency. Arising from original analysis by Arnold Sommerfeld and Jonathan Zenneck of the problem of wave propagation over a lossy earth, it exists as an exact solution to Maxwell's equations.[8]
Recently in 2020, it was demonstrated by Oruganti et al., that it was possible to excite Zenneck wave type waves on flat metal-air interfaces and transmit power across metal obstacles.[9][10]
^Goubau, G. (1951). "Über die Zennecksche Bodenwelle" [On the Zenneck Surface Wave] (PDF). Zeitschrift für Angewandte Physik (in German). 3 (3/4): 103–107.
^Barlow, Harold Monteagle; Brown, John (1962). "Conditions for the Support of Surface Waves at an Interface Between Two Different Homogeneous Media". Radio Surface Waves. Clarendon Press. pp. 10–12. OCLC595227169.
^Corum, K.L.; Corum, J.F.; Miller, M.W. (2016). "Surface waves and the 'crucial' propagation experiment — the key to efficient wireless power delivery". 2016 Texas Symposium on Wireless and Microwave Circuits and Systems (WMCS). pp. 1–4. doi:10.1109/WMCaS.2016.7577497. ISBN978-1-5090-2755-2. S2CID20413009.
^Corum, K.L. and J.F. Corum, “Bell Labs and the ‘Crucial’ 1936 Seneca Lake Experiment.”[verification needed] Republished as: Corum, James; Corum, Kenneth (2016). "Bell Labs and the Radio Surface Wave Propagation Experiment". In Valone, Tom (ed.). Nikola Tesla's Electricity Unplugged: Wireless Transmission of Power as the Master of Lightning Intended. SCB Distributors. p. 198. ISBN978-1-939149-67-1. Any source that can synthesize fields incident at this complex angle will launch a Zenneck wave.
^Barlow, H.; Brown, J. (1962). Radio Surface Waves. London: Oxford University Press. pp. v, vii.
^S. K. Oruganti, A. Khosla and T. G. Thundat, "Wireless Power-Data Transmission for Industrial Internet of Things: Simulations and Experiments," in IEEE Access, vol. 8, pp. 187965-187974, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2020.3030658 .