(IEEE, 2024-10-08) Lezaun Capdevila, Carlos; Navajas Hernández, David; Liberal Olleta, Íñigo; Beruete Díaz, Miguel; Ingeniería Eléctrica, Electrónica y de Comunicación; Ingeniaritza Elektrikoa, Elektronikoa eta Telekomunikazio Ingeniaritza; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC
Light absorption is a key phenomenon for a variety of technologies [1]: radiative cooling, photovoltaics, sensing, communication and camouflaging are just a few examples. These applications demand scalable and compact devices that modulate their absorption spectra, usually engineered using cavities and/or periodic structures acting as resonators. Weak light matter interaction limits the absorption within ultra-compact devices, although epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) materials allows to greatly increase such interaction [2]. The lack of design standardization presents a big gap for designing absorbers. We present a thorough analysis of an arbitrary material on top of a PEC (perfect electric reflector) and a material separated by a spacer from the PEC. We overview the absorption phenomena for different permittivity regions, thicknesses, angles of incidence and polarization. This work helps standardize the design of these absorber configuration.