Abstract
All-medium metamaterial absorbers (MMAs) have attracted considerable attention for ultra-broadband electromagnetic wave (EMW) absorption. Herein, a lightweight graphene aerogel (GA) was synthesized through a low-temperature, atmospheric-pressure reduction route. Benefiting from its 3D porous network, enriched oxygen-containing functional groups, and improved graphitization, the GA offers diverse intrinsic attenuation pathways and a limited effective absorption bandwidth (EAB) of only 6.46 GHz (11.54-18.00 GHz at 1.95 mm). To clarify its attenuation mechanism, nonlinear least-squares fitting was used to quantitatively separate electrical loss contributions. Compared with graphene, the GA shows markedly superior attenuation capability, making it a more suitable medium for MMA design. Guided by equivalent circuit modeling, a stacked frustum-configured GA-based MMA (GA-MMA) was developed, where structure-induced resonances compensate for the intrinsic absence of magnetic components in the GA, thereby substantially broadening its absorption range. The GA-MMA achieves an EAB of 40.7 GHz (9.1-49.8 GHz, reflection loss < -10 dB) and maintains stable absorption under incident angles up to ± 70°. Radar cross-section simulations further indicate its potential in electromagnetic interference mitigation, human health protection, and defense information security. This work provides a feasible route for constructing ultralight and broadband MMAs by coupling electrical loss with structural effects.