Switchable Broadband Terahertz Absorbers Based on Conducting Polymer-Cellulose Aerogels

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Abstract

Terahertz (THz) technologies provide opportunities ranging from calibration targets for satellites and telescopes to communication devices and biomedical imaging systems. A main component will be broadband THz absorbers with switchability. However, optically switchable materials in THz are scarce and their modulation is mostly available at narrow bandwidths. Realizing materials with large and broadband modulation in absorption or transmission forms a critical challenge. This study demonstrates that conducting polymer-cellulose aerogels can provide modulation of broadband THz light with large modulation range from ≈ 13% to 91% absolute transmission, while maintaining specular reflection loss < −30 dB. The exceptional THz modulation is associated with the anomalous optical conductivity peak of conducting polymers, which enhances the absorption in its oxidized state. The study also demonstrates the possibility to reduce the surface hydrophilicity by simple chemical modifications, and shows that broadband absorption of the aerogels at optical frequencies enables de-frosting by solar-induced heating. These low-cost, aqueous solution-processable, sustainable, and bio-friendly aerogels may find use in next-generation intelligent THz devices.

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APA

Kuang, C., Chen, S., Luo, M., Zhang, Q., Sun, X., Han, S., … Jonsson, M. P. (2024). Switchable Broadband Terahertz Absorbers Based on Conducting Polymer-Cellulose Aerogels. Advanced Science, 11(3). https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202305898

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