Abstract
This study proposes design and fabrication methods for an electromagnetic metasurface absorber (MA) that absorbs electromagnetic waves using a metasticker attached on a dielectric substrate blocked by a copper sheet. To guarantee a high design freedom as well as make the absorption bandwidth (BW) as broad as possible, a square-fractal ring is chosen as the metapattern, and its design is optimized using a genetic algorithm. To fabricate the square-fractal rings in a simple manner, an indium-tin-oxide film is cut by using a laser-cutting machine. Then, the metasticker is fabricated by assembling the metapatterns on a double-sided adhesive film which could be attached on the dielectric substrate using the opposite side of the film. From measured results of the finalized MA of which damaged regions caused by the laser-cutting process are compensated in the design process, a broad -10 dB reflectance BW is confirmed from 4.39 to 7.51 GHz of which the fractional BW is 52.44% for the normal incidence. Moreover, a fractional BW of 4.35% is measured in a wide incident angle range from 0° to 60° for both the transverse electric and the transverse magnetic polarizations simultaneously.