Alignment-insensitive bilayer THz metasurface absorbers exceeding 100% bandwidth

  • Kenney M
  • Grant J
  • Cumming D
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Abstract

Journal © 2019 Metamaterial absorbers have been a topic of considerable interest in recent years, with a particular focus on Terahertz (THz) frequencies due to many natural materials having a weak interaction with THz light. Great efforts have aimed to expand such THz absorbers to cover a wide bandwidth whilst also being highly efficient. However, many of these require cascaded or stacked multilayer resonant elements, where even a small deviation in the alignment between layers is extremely detrimental to the performance. Here, we propose a bilayer metasurface absorber (thickness ∼ λ/6) that is immune to such layer misalignments capable of exceeding a fractional bandwidth (FWHM) of 100% of the central frequency. The design works due to a novel absorption mechanism based on Salisbury Screen and anti-reflection absorption mechanisms, using fractal cross absorbers to expand the bandwidth. Our work is of particular benefit to developing devices which require ultra-wide bandwidth, such as bolometric sensing and planar blackbody absorbers, with the extremely robust absorption responses being unaffected by any misalignments between layers – a limiting factor of previous absorbers.

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Kenney, M., Grant, J., & Cumming, D. R. S. (2019). Alignment-insensitive bilayer THz metasurface absorbers exceeding 100% bandwidth. Optics Express, 27(15), 20886. https://doi.org/10.1364/oe.27.020886

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