Abstract

The objective of the paper is to investigate the radar absorption of honeycombs and foldcores with printed conductive patterns. These structures can be manufactured by first printing conductive Frequency Selective Surfaces (FSS) on planar substrates, which then can be used to shape foldcores and honeycombs by means of specific manufacturing technologies. Foldcores can be considered as intermediate shapes between planar sheets (where the printed patterns are perpendicular to the impinging radar waves) and honeycombs (where the printed patterns are parallel to the impinging radar wave). It is shown that the radar absorbing properties of the design strongly depend on the electrical conductivity of the paint, the size of the printed patterns and the orientation of the printed patterns with respect to the impinging wave. It is shown that a planar FSS has a maximum absorption of 50%, while foldcores and honeycombs may obtain a higher absorption due to the fact that the patterns are orientated under an angle with respect to the propagation direction of the wave.


Full document

The PDF file did not load properly or your web browser does not support viewing PDF files. Download directly to your device: Download PDF document

References

[1] Diaz, Rodolfo E. Material with artificial dielectric constant United States Patent 5662982, 2 Sept 1997.

[2] Houck, Andrew A.; Brock, Jeffrey B.; Chuang, Isaac L. Experimental observations of a left-handed material that obeys Snell's law Phys. Rev. Lett. 90(13), 137401, 2003.

[3] Ekmekci E.; Turhan-Sayan G. Comparative investigation of resonance characteristics and electrical size of the double-sided SRR, BC-SRR and conventional SRR type metamaterials for varying substrate parameters Progress In Electromagnetics Research B, Vol. 12, 35-62, 2009.

Back to Top
GET PDF

Document information

Published on 15/02/21
Accepted on 03/03/21
Submitted on 03/03/21

DOI: 10.23967/emus.2019.009
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license

Document Score

0

Views 0
Recommendations 0

Share this document

claim authorship

Are you one of the authors of this document?