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Search Results (291)

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Keywords = electromagnetic wave absorbing

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16 pages, 2947 KB  
Article
Broadband Three-Mode Tunable Metamaterials Based on Graphene and Vanadium Oxide
by Hao Wen, Shouwei Wang, Yiyang Cai, Zhuochen Zou, Zheng Qin and Tianyu Gao
Nanomaterials 2025, 15(20), 1572; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano15201572 - 16 Oct 2025
Viewed by 315
Abstract
Terahertz waves have great potential for applications in security imaging, wireless communication, and other fields, but efficient and tunable terahertz-absorbing devices are the key to their technological development. In this paper, a tunable terahertz metamaterial based on graphene and vanadium dioxide materials is [...] Read more.
Terahertz waves have great potential for applications in security imaging, wireless communication, and other fields, but efficient and tunable terahertz-absorbing devices are the key to their technological development. In this paper, a tunable terahertz metamaterial based on graphene and vanadium dioxide materials is proposed. When the vanadium dioxide conductivity is 1.6 × 105 S/m and the Fermi energy level of graphene is 0.75 eV, the metamaterial exhibits high absorptivity exceeding 90% in ultra-broadband of 2.05–14.03 THz; when the Fermi energy level of graphene is adjusted to 0 eV, the high absorption wavelength range narrowed to 4.07–13.80 THz; when the vanadium dioxide conductivity is adjusted to 200 S/m, the metamaterial exhibits high transmissivity exceeding 80% in the wavelength range up to 15 THz. Additionally, the metamaterial is insensitive to polarization angles and incident angles, allowing it to adapt to changes in the angle of incidence and polarization in practical applications. The metamaterial has potential applications in optical switches, electromagnetic wave stealth devices, and filtering devices. Full article
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16 pages, 4102 KB  
Article
Analytical Design of Optically Transparent, Wideband, and Tunable Microwave Absorber Based on Graphene Spiral Resonator Metasurface
by Ioannis S. Fosteris and George S. Kliros
Photonics 2025, 12(10), 1006; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics12101006 - 13 Oct 2025
Viewed by 385
Abstract
We present the design of an optically transparent, flexible, and tunable microwave absorber covering the X and Ku frequency bands. The absorber is based on a metasurface composed of a periodic array of graphene spiral resonators (GSRs) attached to an ultrathin PET film [...] Read more.
We present the design of an optically transparent, flexible, and tunable microwave absorber covering the X and Ku frequency bands. The absorber is based on a metasurface composed of a periodic array of graphene spiral resonators (GSRs) attached to an ultrathin PET film placed over an ITO-backed dielectric spacer. An equivalent circuit model (ECM), described by closed-form equations, is proposed to optimize the structure for maximum absorption within the target frequency range. The optimized absorber achieves a peak absorbance of 99.7% for normally incident waves while maintaining over 90% absorption at various incident angles in the frequency range from 8.5 GHz to 17.4 GHz. In addition, a double-layer graphene spiral resonator (DGSR) metasurface is proposed to extend the absorber’s operational bandwidth, demonstrating a bandwidth enhancement of approximately 3 GHz and a relative bandwidth of 90% without compromising miniaturization or incident angle stability. Given their remarkable attributes, both GSR and DGSR configurations show great potential for applications in radar stealth technology and transparent electromagnetic compatibility. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Photonics Metamaterials: Processing and Applications)
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45 pages, 6118 KB  
Review
Research Progress on Tunable Absorbers for Various Wavelengths Based on Metasurfaces
by Ke Jiang, Huizhen Feng, Manna Gu, Xufeng Jing and Chenxia Li
Photonics 2025, 12(10), 968; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics12100968 - 29 Sep 2025
Viewed by 1366
Abstract
In complex electromagnetic environments, traditional static absorbers struggle to meet dynamic control requirements. Tunable absorbers based on metasurfaces have emerged as a research hotspot due to their ability to flexibly control electromagnetic wave properties. This paper provides a systematic review of research progress [...] Read more.
In complex electromagnetic environments, traditional static absorbers struggle to meet dynamic control requirements. Tunable absorbers based on metasurfaces have emerged as a research hotspot due to their ability to flexibly control electromagnetic wave properties. This paper provides a systematic review of research progress in tunable absorbers across the microwave, terahertz, and infrared bands, with a focus on analyzing the physical mechanisms, material systems, and performance characteristics of five dynamic control methods: electrical control, magnetic control, optical control, temperature control, and mechanical control. Electrical control achieves rapid response through materials such as graphene and varactor diodes; magnetic control utilizes ferrites and other materials for stable tuning; optical control relies on photosensitive materials for ultrafast switching; temperature control employs phase-change materials for large-range reversible regulation; and mechanical control expands tuning freedom through structural deformation. Research indicates that multi-band compatibility faces challenges due to differences in structural scale and physical mechanisms, necessitating the integration of emerging materials and synergistic control strategies. This paper summarizes the core performance metrics and typical applications of absorbers across various bands and outlines future development directions such as multi-field synergistic control and low-power design, providing theoretical references and technical pathways for the development of intelligent tunable absorber devices. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Metasurfaces: Novel Designs and Applications)
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27 pages, 8496 KB  
Review
Progress in Electromagnetic Wave Absorption of Multifunctional Structured Metamaterials
by Zhuo Lu, Luwei Liu, Zhou Chen, Changxian Wang, Xiaolei Zhu, Xiaofeng Lu, Hui Yuan and Hao Huang
Polymers 2025, 17(18), 2559; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17182559 - 22 Sep 2025
Viewed by 888
Abstract
This review summarizes recent advances in multifunctional metamaterials (MF-MMs) for electromagnetic (EM) wave absorption. MF-MMs overcome the key limitations of conventional absorbers—such as narrow bandwidth, limited functionality, and poor environmental adaptability—offering enhanced protection against EM security threats in radar, aerospace, and defense applications. [...] Read more.
This review summarizes recent advances in multifunctional metamaterials (MF-MMs) for electromagnetic (EM) wave absorption. MF-MMs overcome the key limitations of conventional absorbers—such as narrow bandwidth, limited functionality, and poor environmental adaptability—offering enhanced protection against EM security threats in radar, aerospace, and defense applications. This review focuses on an integrated structure-material-function co-design strategy, highlighting advances in three-dimensional (3D) lattice architectures, composite laminates, conformal geometries, bio-inspired topologies, and metasurfaces. When synergized with multicomponent composites, these structural innovations enable the co-regulation of impedance matching and EM loss mechanisms (dielectric, magnetic, and resistive dissipation), thereby achieving broadband absorption and enhanced multifunctionality. Key findings demonstrate that 3D lattice structures enhance mechanical load-bearing capacity by up to 935% while enabling low-frequency broadband absorption. Composite laminates achieve breakthroughs in ultra-broadband coverage (1.26–40 GHz), subwavelength thickness (<5 mm), and high flexural strength (>23 MPa). Bio-inspired topologies provide wide-incident-angle absorption with bandwidths up to 31.64 GHz. Metasurfaces facilitate multiphysics functional integration. Despite the significant potential of MF-MMs in resolving broadband stealth and multifunctional synergy challenges via EM wave absorption, their practical application is constrained by several limitations: limited dynamic tunability, incomplete multiphysics coupling mechanisms, insufficient adaptability to extreme environments, and difficulties in scalable manufacturing and reliability assurance. Future research should prioritize intelligent dynamic response, deeper integration of multiphysics functionalities, and performance optimization under extreme conditions. Full article
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14 pages, 8738 KB  
Article
Electromagnetic Wave Absorption Properties of Cation-Substituted Ba0.5Sr0.5Zn2−xMexFe16O27 (Me = Fe, Ni, Co, Cu, Mn) W-Type Hexagonal Ferrites
by Jae-Hee Heo and Young-Min Kang
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(17), 9586; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15179586 - 30 Aug 2025
Viewed by 567
Abstract
W-type hexaferrites with compositions Ba0.5Sr0.5Zn2-xMexFe16O27 (Me = Fe, Ni, Co, Cu, Mn; x = 1) and Ba0.5Sr0.5Zn2−xMnxFe16O27 (x [...] Read more.
W-type hexaferrites with compositions Ba0.5Sr0.5Zn2-xMexFe16O27 (Me = Fe, Ni, Co, Cu, Mn; x = 1) and Ba0.5Sr0.5Zn2−xMnxFe16O27 (x = 0–2.0) were synthesized via solid-state reaction and optimized using a two-step calcination process to obtain single-phase or nearly single-phase structures. Their electromagnetic (EM) wave absorption properties were investigated by fabricating composites with 10 wt% epoxy and measuring the complex permittivity and permeability across two frequency bands: 0.1–18 GHz and 26.5–40 GHz. Reflection loss (RL) was calculated and visualized as two-dimensional (2D) maps with respect to frequency and sample thickness. In the 0.1–18 GHz range, only the Co-substituted sample exhibited strong ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) and broadband absorption, achieving a minimum RL of −41.5 dB at 4.84 GHz and a −10 dB bandwidth of 11.8 GHz. In contrast, the other Ba0.5Sr0.5Zn2-xMexFe16O27 samples (Me = Fe, Mn, Ni, Cu) showed no significant absorption in this range due to the absence of FMR. However, all these samples clearly exhibited FMR characteristics and distinct absorption peaks in the 26.5–40 GHz range, particularly the Mn-substituted series, which demonstrated RL values below −10 dB over the 32.0–40 GHz range with absorber thicknesses below 1 mm. The FMR frequency varied depending on the substitution type and amount. In the Mn-substituted series, the FMR frequency was lowest at x = 1.0 and increased as x deviated from this composition. This study confirms the potential of Co-free W-type hexaferrites as efficient, cost-effective, and broadband EM wave absorbers in the 26.5–40 GHz range. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Advanced Composite Materials)
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11 pages, 3140 KB  
Article
Study on the High-Temperature Microwave Absorption Performance and Mechanism of SiC Nanowire-Reinforced Porous Si3N4 Ceramics
by Jialin Bai, Xiumin Yao, Xuejian Liu and Zhengren Huang
Materials 2025, 18(17), 4071; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18174071 - 30 Aug 2025
Viewed by 675
Abstract
SiC nanowires (SiCnw), due to their excellent dielectric properties, are promising high-temperature absorbing materials. However, the mechanism of their high-temperature absorption still requires further research. Therefore, porous SiCnw/Si3N4 and SiC/Si3N4 ceramics with different [...] Read more.
SiC nanowires (SiCnw), due to their excellent dielectric properties, are promising high-temperature absorbing materials. However, the mechanism of their high-temperature absorption still requires further research. Therefore, porous SiCnw/Si3N4 and SiC/Si3N4 ceramics with different SiC phase morphologies were fabricated using a simple precursor impregnation and pyrolysis method. The Fe impurity content of the Si3N4 powder raw material significantly affects the generation of SiC nanowires. When SiC exists in the form of nanowires, the excellent conductivity brought by the conductive network of the nanowires causes a significant response of the material’s permittivity to temperature. When the test temperature is room temperature, SiCnw/Si3N4 has excellent absorption performance with a minimum reflection loss of −29.75 dB at 2.16 mm and an effective absorption bandwidth of 3.72 GHz at 2.54 mm. As the test temperature increases to 300 °C, the effective absorption bandwidth of SiCnw/Si3N4 covers the entire X-band. The porous SiCnw/Si3N4 ceramics exhibit excellent electromagnetic wave absorption performance, demonstrating significant application potential for high-temperature environments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Advanced and Functional Ceramics and Glasses)
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15 pages, 4685 KB  
Article
Porous Biomass Carbon Composites Derived from Canadian Goldenrod and Their Excellent Microwave Absorption
by Zhidai Zhou, Yan Yan, Jiaming Liu, Zhen He and Yuxin Wang
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(17), 9474; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15179474 - 28 Aug 2025
Viewed by 538
Abstract
Electromagnetic wave pollution has become a growing concern in recent decades. Biomass-derived carbon materials have attracted significant attention as wave-absorbing materials due to their easy availability, low cost, and environmental friendliness. In this study, the invasive plant Solidago canadensis (Canada goldenrod) in China [...] Read more.
Electromagnetic wave pollution has become a growing concern in recent decades. Biomass-derived carbon materials have attracted significant attention as wave-absorbing materials due to their easy availability, low cost, and environmental friendliness. In this study, the invasive plant Solidago canadensis (Canada goldenrod) in China was used as the carbon source, and a two-step pyrolysis and hydrothermal process was applied to create a porous composite material with magnetic CoFe2O4 particles. This improved the impedance matching of the biomass carbon and introduced multiple loss mechanisms. The combination of magnetic loss, interfacial polarization, dipole polarization, and multiple reflections in the biomass carbon produced a material with excellent microwave absorption properties. At 16.76 GHz with a thickness of 2.5 mm, the material achieved a minimum reflection loss of −35.21 dB and an effective absorption bandwidth of 7.76 GHz. This study presents a promising method for developing biomass-based absorbers and offers an efficient, cost-effective, and environmentally friendly solution for managing invasive species. Full article
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12 pages, 3228 KB  
Communication
Green and Efficient Lithium Extraction from Spent NCM Batteries via Electromagnetic Radiation
by Ling Tong, Gui-Rong Zhang, Da-Shuai Li, Xing-Yu Huang, Yuan-Long Liu and Yan-Qing Cheng
Materials 2025, 18(17), 3975; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18173975 - 25 Aug 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 771
Abstract
The conventional recycling of spent lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) is hindered by high energy consumption and severe environmental pollution. In this study, a novel method utilizing high-frequency electromagnetic radiation was proposed to process the black mass derived from spent NCM-LIBs, significantly reducing both energy [...] Read more.
The conventional recycling of spent lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) is hindered by high energy consumption and severe environmental pollution. In this study, a novel method utilizing high-frequency electromagnetic radiation was proposed to process the black mass derived from spent NCM-LIBs, significantly reducing both energy consumption and chemical reagent usage. Conductive carbon black was introduced as an electromagnetic-wave-absorbing additive to improve the electromagnetic energy into thermal energy conversion efficiency during electromagnetic radiation. As a result, the decomposition and reduction of NCM materials can be completed within just 10 min at a microwave power of 500 W. Following electromagnetic irradiation, lithium was efficiently extracted via simple water leaching, achieving an extraction efficiency of 88.24%. Furthermore, a microwave heating device based on traveling-wave propagation was developed. Unlike conventional small-scale microwave systems that employ resonant cavities, this design enables improved heating uniformity, higher efficiency, and greater scalability for industrial microwave-assisted chemical processes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recycling and Electrode Materials of Lithium Batteries)
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14 pages, 1950 KB  
Article
Tailoring Microwave Absorption via Ferromagnetic Resonance and Quarter-Wave Effects in Carbonaceous Ternary FeCoCr Alloy/PVDF Polymer Composites
by Rajeev Kumar, Harish Kumar Choudhary, Shital P. Pawar, Manjunatha Mushtagatte and Balaram Sahoo
Microwave 2025, 1(2), 8; https://doi.org/10.3390/microwave1020008 - 25 Aug 2025
Viewed by 582
Abstract
In this study, we investigate the dominant electromagnetic wave absorption mechanism–ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) loss versus quarter-wave cancellation in a novel PVDF-based polymer composite embedded with carbonaceous nanostructures incorporating FeCoCr ternary alloy. The majority of the nanoparticles are embedded at the terminal ends of [...] Read more.
In this study, we investigate the dominant electromagnetic wave absorption mechanism–ferromagnetic resonance (FMR) loss versus quarter-wave cancellation in a novel PVDF-based polymer composite embedded with carbonaceous nanostructures incorporating FeCoCr ternary alloy. The majority of the nanoparticles are embedded at the terminal ends of the carbon nanotubes, while a small fraction exists as isolated core–shell, carbon-coated spherical particles. Overall, the synthesized material predominantly exhibits a nanotubular carbon morphology. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) confirms that the encapsulated nanoparticles are quasi-spherical in shape, with an average size ranging from approximately 25 to 40 nm. The polymeric composite was synthesized via solution casting, ensuring homogenous dispersion of filler constituent. Electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding performance and reflection loss characteristics were evaluated in the X-band frequency range. Experimental results reveal a significant reflection loss exceeding −20 dB at a matching thickness of 2.5 mm, with peak absorption shifting across frequencies with thickness variation. The comparative analysis, supported by quarter-wave theory and FMR resonance conditions, indicates that the absorption mechanism transitions between magnetic resonance and interference-based cancellation depending on the material configuration and thickness. This work provides experimental validation of loss mechanism dominance in magnetic alloy/polymer composites and proposes design principles for tailoring broadband microwave absorbers. Full article
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16 pages, 3508 KB  
Article
Tensile Strength and Electromagnetic Wave Absorption Properties of B-Doped SiC Nanowire/Silicone Composites
by Yiwei Wang, Qin Qin, Jingyue Chen, Xiang Lu, Jialu Yin, Ranhao Liu, Peijie Jiang, Jianlei Kuang and Wenbin Cao
Nanomaterials 2025, 15(17), 1298; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano15171298 - 22 Aug 2025
Viewed by 956
Abstract
To investigate the synthesis route and electromagnetic wave absorption performance of SiC nanowires (SiC-NWs), boron was simultaneously employed as both a catalyst and a dopant, and the doped nanowires were embedded into a silicone matrix to fabricate SiC-NW/silicone composites with enhanced mechanical properties [...] Read more.
To investigate the synthesis route and electromagnetic wave absorption performance of SiC nanowires (SiC-NWs), boron was simultaneously employed as both a catalyst and a dopant, and the doped nanowires were embedded into a silicone matrix to fabricate SiC-NW/silicone composites with enhanced mechanical properties and microwave attenuation. Boric acid significantly increased the yield of SiC-NWs, while boron doping enhanced both conductive and relaxation losses. The subsequent nanowire pull-out mechanism improved the tensile strength of the composites by 185%, reaching 5.7 MPa at a filler loading of 5 wt%. The three-dimensional SiC-NW network provided synergistic dielectric and conductive losses, along with good impedance matching, achieving a minimum reflection loss of −35 dB at a thickness of 3.5 mm and an effective absorption bandwidth of 4.2 GHz within the 8.2–12.4 GHz range, with a nanowire content of only 5 wt%. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Nanowires: Growth, Properties, and Applications)
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14 pages, 2905 KB  
Article
Optimal Design of a Lightweight Terahertz Absorber Featuring Ultra-Wideband Polarization-Insensitive Characteristics
by Yafeng Hao, Tengteng Li, Pu Zhu, Fupeng Ma, Huijia Wu, Cheng Lei, Meihong Liu, Ting Liang and Jianquan Yao
Photonics 2025, 12(8), 787; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics12080787 - 4 Aug 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1387
Abstract
Metamaterial absorbers in terahertz (THz) based bands have garnered significant attention for their potential applications in military stealth, terahertz imaging, and other fields. Nevertheless, the limited bandwidth, low absorption rate, and heavy weight greatly reduce the further development and wide application of terahertz [...] Read more.
Metamaterial absorbers in terahertz (THz) based bands have garnered significant attention for their potential applications in military stealth, terahertz imaging, and other fields. Nevertheless, the limited bandwidth, low absorption rate, and heavy weight greatly reduce the further development and wide application of terahertz absorbers. To solve these problems, we propose a polystyrene (PS)-based ultra-broadband metamaterial absorber integrated with a polyethylene terephthalate (PET) double-sided adhesive layer and a patterned indium tin oxide (ITO) film through the simulation method, which operates in the THz band. The electromagnetic wave absorption properties and underlying physical absorption mechanisms of the proposed metamaterial absorbers are comprehensively modeled and rigorously numerically simulated. The research demonstrates the metamaterial absorber can achieve absorption performance of over 90% for fully polarized incident waves in the ultra-wideband range of 1.2–10 THz, especially achieving perfect absorption characteristics of over 99.9% near 1.8–1.9 THz and 5.8–6.2 THz. The proposed absorber has a lightweight physical property of 0.7 kg/m2 and polarization-insensitive characteristic, and it achieves a broad-angle that allows a range of incidence angles up to 60°. The simulation research results of this article provide theoretical support for the design of terahertz absorbers with ultra-wideband absorption characteristics. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Metamaterials and Nanophotonics: Fundamentals and Applications)
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16 pages, 2799 KB  
Article
Electromagnetic Wave-Absorption Properties of FDM-Printed Acrylonitrile–Styrene–Acrylate/Multi-Walled Carbon Nanotube Composite Structures
by Aobo Zhou and Yan Wang
Polymers 2025, 17(15), 2010; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17152010 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 499
Abstract
The growing need for lightweight, customizable electromagnetic wave absorbers with weather resistance in aerospace and electromagnetic compatibility applications motivates this study, which addresses the limitations of conventional materials in simultaneously achieving structural efficiency, broadband absorption, and environmental durability. We propose a fused deposition [...] Read more.
The growing need for lightweight, customizable electromagnetic wave absorbers with weather resistance in aerospace and electromagnetic compatibility applications motivates this study, which addresses the limitations of conventional materials in simultaneously achieving structural efficiency, broadband absorption, and environmental durability. We propose a fused deposition modeling (FDM)-based approach for fabricating lightweight wave-absorbing structures using acrylonitrile-styrene-acrylate (ASA)/multi-walled carbon nanotube (MWCNT) composites. Results demonstrate that CST Studio Suite simulations reveal a minimum reflection loss of −18.16 dB and an effective absorption bandwidth (RL < −10 dB) of 3.75 GHz for the 2 mm-thick composite plate when the MWCNT content is 2%. Through FDM fabrication and structural optimization, significant performance enhancements are achieved: The gradient honeycomb design with larger dimensions achieved an effective absorption bandwidth of 6.56 GHz and a minimum reflection loss of −32.60 dB. Meanwhile, the stacked stake structure exhibited a broader effective absorption bandwidth of 10.58 GHz, with its lowest reflection loss reaching −22.82 dB. This research provides innovative approaches for developing and manufacturing tailored lightweight electromagnetic wave-absorbing structures, which could be valuable for aerospace stealth technology and electromagnetic compatibility solutions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Polymer Processing and Engineering)
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28 pages, 14374 KB  
Article
Novel Airfoil-Shaped Radar-Absorbing Inlet Grilles on Aircraft Incorporating Metasurfaces: Multidisciplinary Design and Optimization Using EHVI–Bayesian Method
by Xufei Wang, Yongqiang Shi, Qingzhen Yang, Huimin Xiang and Saile Zhang
Sensors 2025, 25(14), 4525; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25144525 - 21 Jul 2025
Viewed by 648
Abstract
Aircraft, as electromagnetically complex targets, have radar cross-sections (RCSs) that are influenced by various factors, with the inlet duct being a critical component that often serves as a primary source of electromagnetic scattering, significantly impacting the scattering characteristics. In light of the conflict [...] Read more.
Aircraft, as electromagnetically complex targets, have radar cross-sections (RCSs) that are influenced by various factors, with the inlet duct being a critical component that often serves as a primary source of electromagnetic scattering, significantly impacting the scattering characteristics. In light of the conflict between aerodynamic performance and electromagnetic characteristics in the design of aircraft engine inlet grilles, this paper proposes a metasurface radar-absorbing inlet grille (RIG) solution based on a NACA symmetric airfoil. The RIG adopts a sandwich structure consisting of a polyethylene terephthalate (PET) dielectric substrate, a copper zigzag metal strip array, and an indium tin oxide (ITO) resistive film. By leveraging the principles of surface plasmon polaritons, electromagnetic wave absorption can be achieved. To enhance the design efficiency, a multi-objective Bayesian optimization framework driven by the expected hypervolume improvement (EHVI) is constructed. The results show that, compared with a conventional rectangular cross-section grille, an airfoil-shaped grille under the same constraints will reduce both aerodynamic losses and the absorption bandwidth. After 100-step EHVI–Bayesian optimization, the optimized balanced model attains a 57.79% reduction in aerodynamic loss relative to the rectangular-shaped grille, while its absorption bandwidth increases by 111.99%. The RCS exhibits a reduction of over 8.77 dBsm in the high-frequency band. These results confirm that the proposed optimization design process can effectively balance the conflict between aerodynamic performance and stealth performance for RIGs, reducing the signal strength of aircraft engine inlets. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Electronic Sensors)
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13 pages, 6483 KB  
Article
Design of I-WP Gradient Metamaterial Broadband Electromagnetic Absorber Based on Additive Manufacturing
by Yi Qin, Yuchuan Kang, He Liu, Jianbin Feng and Jianxin Qiao
Polymers 2025, 17(14), 1990; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17141990 - 20 Jul 2025
Viewed by 837
Abstract
The proliferation of electromagnetic wave applications has accentuated electromagnetic pollution concerns, highlighting the critical importance of electromagnetic wave absorbers (EMA). This study proposes innovative I-Wrapped Package Lattice electromagnetic wave absorbers (IWP–EMA) based on the triply periodic minimal surface (TPMS) lattice structure. Through a [...] Read more.
The proliferation of electromagnetic wave applications has accentuated electromagnetic pollution concerns, highlighting the critical importance of electromagnetic wave absorbers (EMA). This study proposes innovative I-Wrapped Package Lattice electromagnetic wave absorbers (IWP–EMA) based on the triply periodic minimal surface (TPMS) lattice structure. Through a rational design of porous gradient structures, broadband wave absorption was achieved while maintaining lightweight characteristics and mechanical robustness. The optimized three-dimensional configuration features a 20 mm thick gradient structure with a progressive relative density transition from 10% to 30%. Under normal incidence conditions, this gradient IWP–EMA basically achieves broadband absorption with a reflection loss below −10 dB across the 2–40 GHz frequency band, with absorption peaks below −19 dB, demonstrating good impedance-matching characteristics. Additionally, due to the complex interactions of electromagnetic waves within the structure, the proposed IWP–EMA achieves a wide-angle absorption range of 70° under Transverse Electric (TE) polarization and 70° under Transverse Magnetic (TM) polarization. The synergistic integration of the TPMS design and additive manufacturing technology employed in this study significantly expands the design space and application potential of electromagnetic absorption structures. Full article
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18 pages, 3495 KB  
Article
Next-Generation Light Harvesting: MXene (Ti3C2Tx)-Based Metamaterial Absorbers for a Broad Wavelength Range from 0.3 μm to 18 μm
by Abida Parveen, Deepika Tyagi, Vijay Laxmi, Naeem Ullah, Faisal Ahmad, Ahsan Irshad, Keyu Tao and Zhengbiao Ouyang
Materials 2025, 18(14), 3273; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18143273 - 11 Jul 2025
Viewed by 946
Abstract
Electromagnetic wave (EMW) absorption materials are crucial for a wide range of applications, yet most existing materials suffer from complex fabrication and narrow absorption bands, particularly under harsh environmental conditions. In this study, we introduce a broadband metamaterial absorber based on Ti3 [...] Read more.
Electromagnetic wave (EMW) absorption materials are crucial for a wide range of applications, yet most existing materials suffer from complex fabrication and narrow absorption bands, particularly under harsh environmental conditions. In this study, we introduce a broadband metamaterial absorber based on Ti3C2O2 MXene, a novel two-dimensional material that uniquely combines high electrical and metallic conductivity with hydrophilicity, biocompatibility, and an extensive surface area. Through advanced finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) simulations, the proposed absorber achieves over 95% absorption from 0.3 µm to 18 µm. Additionally, other MXene variants, including Ti3C2F2 and Ti3C2(OH)2, demonstrate robust absorption above 85%. This absorber not only outperforms previously reported structures in terms of efficiency and spectral coverage but also opens avenues for integration into applications such as infrared sensing, energy harvesting, wearable electronics, and Internet of Things (IoT) systems. Full article
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