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With the continuous improvement of detection technology, higher requirements are put forward for infrared camouflage. Conventional low-emissivity materials have serious thermal instability, which increases the risk of detection. There is an urgent need to investigate more efficient infrared stealth materials. We design a metamaterial selective broadband emitter that utilizes multi-resonance coupling of metal patterns for infrared stealth. The proposed design exhibits low emissivity in the infrared atmosphere windows (3 to 5 μm and 8 to 14 μm) for infrared suppression and high emissivity in the non-infrared atmosphere window (5 to 8 μm) for radiative cooling. We introduce a supplementary design for high-temperature environments to meet a broader application need. Moreover, the low angle-dependence of the metamaterial emitter enables it to maintain broadband absorption characteristics even under large-angle incidence. This proposed approach serves as an effective supplement to the design of metamaterial broadband emitters and holds great potential for applications in infrared stealth, radiative cooling, thermal detection, sensors, thermophotovoltaics, and various other fields.
Li et al. (Thu,) studied this question.