The absorption of conventional metamaterial absorbers (MMAs), originating from the electric or magnetic resonance induced ohmic loss, usually has a narrow bandwidth because of the limited surface resistance of the… Click to show full abstract
The absorption of conventional metamaterial absorbers (MMAs), originating from the electric or magnetic resonance induced ohmic loss, usually has a narrow bandwidth because of the limited surface resistance of the structured metal layers. In this letter, we experimentally demonstrate a broadband MMA by using graphite instead of copper to construct the surface pattern structure. Compared with metals, the graphite has a low electric conductivity, and its skin depth is far more than those of metals. As a result, the effective thickness of our graphite-based absorber, which determines the thickness-dependent resonance, is very sensitive to the thickness of the structured graphite layer. Due to the relatively large surface resistance and the sensitive tunable thickness-dependent resonance, our design achieves an absorption bandwidth (less than –10 dB) from 12.7 to 18 GHz. Our results may provide an effective way to tune the thickness-dependent resonance and to broaden the absorption bandwidth of MMA.
               
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