Mid-to-far infrared tunable perfect absorption by a sub - \lambda/100 nanofilm in a fractal phasor resonant cavity
Johann Toudert, Rosalia Serna, Marina Garc\'ia Pardo, Nicolas Ramos,, Ram\'on J. Pel\'aez, Bel\'en Mat\'e

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel resonant cavity design enabling perfect infrared light absorption in ultra-thin nanofilms with broad wavelength tunability, using a fractal phasor interference mechanism.
Contribution
A new cavity concept achieves perfect absorption in nanofilms thinner than bdb5, with broad tunability using a single set of materials, leveraging fractal phasor interference.
Findings
Achieved angle-insensitive perfect absorption in sub-bdb5 bismuth nanofilms
Demonstrated wavelength tunability from 3 to 20 b5m
Enabled ultra-thin film absorption more than 2 orders of magnitude smaller than b5
Abstract
Integrating an absorbing thin film into a resonant cavity is the most practical way to achieve perfect absorption of light at a selected wavelength in the mid-to-far infrared, as required to target blackbody radiation or molecular fingerprints. The cavity is designed to resonate and enable perfect absorption in the film at the chosen wavelength \lambda. However, in current state-of-the-art designs, a still large absorbing film thickness (\lambda/50) is needed and tuning the perfect absorption wavelength over a broad range requires changing the cavity materials. Here, we introduce a new resonant cavity concept to achieve perfect absorption of infrared light in much thinner and thus really nanoscale films, with a broad wavelength tunability using a single set of cavity materials. It requires a nanofilm with giant refractive index and small extinction coefficient (found in emerging…
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