Abstract

A bifunctional terahertz meta-material absorber with three layers is designed. The surface of the bifunctional meta-material absorber is a periodically patterned array composed of hybrid structures of vanadium dioxide (VO2) and metallic resonators; the middle layer is a nondestructive TOPAS film, and the bottom layer is a continuous metallic plane. Utilizing the phase-transition property of VO2, the responses of the meta-material absorber could be dynamically switched between triple-band absorption and ultra-broadband absorption. When VO2 is in the metallic state, an ultra-broadband absorption covering the bandwidth of 6.62 THz is achieved over the range from 4.71 THz to 11.33 THz. When VO2 is in the di-electric state, three absorption peaks resonated at 10.57 THz, 12.68 THz, and 13.91 THz. The physical mechanisms of the bifunctional meta-material absorber were explored by analyzing their near-field distributions. The effects of varying structural parameters on triple-band and ultra-broadband absorption were investigated. It is revealed that by optimizing the structure parameters, the number of absorption peaks could be increased for a certain sacrifice of absorption bandwidth. FDTD Solutions and CST Microwave Studio were used to simulate the data of the absorber, and similar results were obtained.

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