Abstract

Long and very long-wave infrared are the most important bands in infrared detection technology because of their high atmospheric window radiation energy. At present, long and very long-wave infrared detectors are widely used in atmospheric monitoring, night reconnaissance, deep space exploration and other fields. In this paper, we first analyze the coupling resonance in the dual-band absorber (Ti–Si–Ti), and the absorption rates are 97.05% and 98.95% at 6.1 μm and 19.2 μm, respectively. Then, a four-layer (Ti–Si–SiO2–Ti) absorber with a complex dielectric structure is obtained by using the surface plasmon resonance and the inherent absorption of the lossy material SiO2. In addition to the traditional electromagnetic field analysis, we also used the layer absorption energy loss theory to study the inherent absorption mechanism of SiO2, and the average absorption of the absorber from 19 to 24.7 μm reached 92.87%. Finally, based on the composite dielectric layer, a thin ultra-wideband absorber with four nanorods of the same size surface structure was designed, and the average absorption was 92.03% from 13.3 to 24.6 μm. The polarization-insensitive ultra-wideband absorber proposed by us is light, simple in structure and easy to manufacture, and has potential application value in atmospheric monitoring, night reconnaissance, deep space exploration and other fields.

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