Mechanically Reconfigurable Terahertz Bandpass Filter Based on Double-Layered Subwavelength Metallic Rods
Sanaz Zarei

TL;DR
This paper introduces a mechanically reconfigurable terahertz bandpass filter using a double-layered metallic structure, enabling frequency tuning from 0.81 THz to 1.32 THz with high efficiency and simple design.
Contribution
It presents a novel, polarization-insensitive, mechanically tunable terahertz filter with a large frequency range and analysis of its physical tuning mechanism.
Findings
Frequency tuning from 0.81 THz to 1.32 THz by adjusting interlayer spacing.
Maximum transmission efficiency exceeds 98%.
The filter exhibits a quality factor between 3.88 and 9.77.
Abstract
Tunable bandpass terahertz filters are demanded in various key applications such as hyperspectral imagers, miniaturized spectrometers, and high-speed wireless communication systems. Here, a mechanically reconfigurable double-layered subwavelength metallic structure is presented for frequency-agile terahertz transmission bandpass filtering. The theoretically demonstrated polarization-insensitive filter shows remarkable performance metrics. By varying the vertical interlayer spacing of the metallic layers from 20 um to 4 um, the operation frequency tunes from 0.81 THz to 1.32 THz, and the full width at half maximum bandwidth changes from 209 GHz to 135 GHz, with maximum transmission efficiency greater than 98% and quality factor ranging between 3.88 and 9.77. A larger variation range of the vertical interlayer spacing leads to an enhanced frequency tuning range of the filter. Furthermore,…
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