4.6 Article

A Switchable Frequency Selective Rasorber With Wide Passband

Journal

IEEE ANTENNAS AND WIRELESS PROPAGATION LETTERS
Volume 20, Issue 8, Pages 1567-1571

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/LAWP.2021.3091480

Keywords

Rasorber; switchable; wideband

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [62001095, U20B2043]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China [ZYGX2018KYQD200]

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Researchers have proposed a switchable wide-passband rasorber using a frequency-selective surface (FSS) and two resistive layers to improve the stealth performance of wideband antennas. The reactance variation of the low-Q resonator in the switchable resistive layer during the switching process is investigated, and a nonswitchable resistive layer is designed to improve out-of-band absorption performance.
Frequency selective rasorbers with wide passband have been investigated for the stealth of wideband antennas over the past few years. However, the wide passband degrades its in-band stealth performance. Therefore, in this work, a switchable wide-passband rasorber, whose passband can be switched into absorption band, is proposed utilizing a frequency-selective surface (FSS) and two resistive layers. First, a switchable second-order FSS is presented and the design of switchable resistive layer with wide passband is analyzed. Second, the reactance variation of the low-Q resonator in switchable resistive layer during the switching process is investigated to elaborate its effects on the out-of-band absorption performance of rasorber. Third, a nonswitchable resistive layer is designed to improve out-of-band absorption. Simulated results indicate that in rasorbing state the proposed single-polarized device exhibits a passband from 3.5 to 4.8 GHz (31%) with insertion loss less than -1 dB and a low-reflection band from 0.93 to 7.16 GHz (154%). In absorbing state, the passband is eliminated and the device exhibits a wide low-reflection band from 0.96 to 6.85 GHz (150.8%).

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