▎ 摘 要
Enhancing the light-matter interaction in two-dimensional (2D) materials with high Q resonances in photonic structures has boosted the development of optical and photonic devices. Herein we intend to build a bridge between the radiation engineering and the bound states in the continuum (BIC), and present a general method to control light absorption at critical coupling through the quasi-BIC resonance. In a single-mode, two-port system composed of graphene, coupled with silicon nanodisk metasurfaces, the maximum absorption of 0.5 can be achieved when the radiation rate of the magnetic dipole resonance equals to the dissipate loss rate of graphene. Furthermore, the absorption bandwidth can be adjusted more than two orders of magnitude, from 0.9 nm to 94 nm, by simultaneously changing the asymmetric parameter of metasurfaces, the Fermi level, and the layer number of graphene. This work reveals the essential role of BIC in radiation engineering and provides promising strategies in controlling light absorption of 2D materials for the next-generation optical and photonic devices, e.g., light emitters, detectors, modulators, and sensors.