Alici, K. B.Bilotti, F.Vegni, L.Özbay, Ekmel2016-02-082016-02-082010-10-290021-8979http://hdl.handle.net/11693/22174We designed, implemented, and experimentally characterized electrically thin microwave absorbers by using the metamaterial concept. The absorbers consist of (i) a metal back plate and an artificial magnetic material layer; (ii) metamaterial back plate and a resistive sheet layer. We investigated absorber performance in terms of absorbance, fractional bandwidth, and electrical thickness, all of which depend on the dimensions of the metamaterial unit cell and the distance between the back plate and metamaterial layer. As a proof of concept, we demonstrated a λ/4.7 thick absorber of type I, with a 99.8% absorption peak along with a 8% fractional bandwidth. We have shown that as the electrical size of the metamaterial unit cell decreases, the absorber electrical thickness can further be reduced. We investigated this concept by using two different magnetic metamaterial inclusions: the split-ring resonator (SRR) and multiple SSR (MSRR). We have also demonstrated experimentally a λ/4.7 and a λ/4.2 thick absorbers of type II, based on SRR and MSRR magnetic metamaterial back plates, respectively. The absorption peak of the SRR layout is 97.4%, while for the MSRR one the absorption peak is 98.4%. The 10 dB bandwidths were 9.9% and 9.6% for the SRR and MSRR cases, respectively.EnglishAbsorbancesAbsorption peaksArtificial magnetic materialsElectrical thicknessExperimental verificationFractional bandwidthsMagnetic metamaterialsMicrowave absorbersProof of conceptResistive sheetsSplitring resonatorsSub-wavelengthType IIUnit cellsBandwidthMagnetic materialsMetamaterialsPlate metalRing gagesSheet metalAbsorptionExperimental verification of metamaterial based subwavelength microwave absorbersArticle10.1063/1.3493736