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1.
Materials (Basel) ; 14(2)2021 Jan 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33429875

ABSTRACT

This paper reports an independently tunable graphene-based metamaterial absorber (GMA) designed by etching two cascaded resonators with dissimilar sizes in the unit cell. Two perfect absorption peaks were obtained at 6.94 and 10.68 µm with simple single-layer metal-graphene metamaterials; the peaks show absorption values higher than 99%. The mechanism of absorption was analyzed theoretically. The independent tunability of the metamaterial absorber (MA) was realized by varying the Fermi level of graphene under a set of resonators. Furthermore, multi-band and wide-band absorption were observed by the proposed structure upon increasing the number of resonators and resizing them in the unit cell. The obtained results demonstrate the multipurpose performance of this type of absorber and indicate its potential application in diverse applications, such as solar energy harvesting and thermal absorbing.

2.
Opt Express ; 28(20): 28773-28781, 2020 Sep 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33114788

ABSTRACT

We herein present a high-performance ultrawideband terahertz absorber with a silicon hemi-ellipsoid (SHE) on a monolayer graphene that is separated by a dielectric spacer from a bottom metal reflector. The constitution of the absorber, which includes dielectric-mode structures and unstructured monolayer graphene, can minimize undesired optical losses in metals and avoid graphene processing. The absorber achieved an ultrawide absorption bandwidth from 2 THz to more than 10 THz with an average absorption of 95.72%, and the relative bandwidth is 133%. The excellent absorption properties are owing to the presence of graphene and the shape morphing of the SHE, in which multiple discrete graphene plasmon resonances (GPRs) and continuous multimode Fabry-Perot resonances (FPRs) can be excited. By coupling the GPRs and FPRs, the absorption spectrum is extended and smoothed to realize an ultrawideband absorber. The incident angular insensitivity within 50° of the absorber is discussed. The results will shed light on the better performance of terahertz trapping, imaging, communication and detection.

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