Smartphone has different lens array design, so that calculator probably doesn't apply to smartphone cameras.
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This is the correct answer
The focal length is the distance of the film plan and the nodal point of the lens. The field of view is the angle you can see with a certain lens focal (nodal point distance) with a given observation surface (could be analog, digital, biological) Whether it’s celluloid, digital, stills video or phone or your eyes. All have the same physics and optics. This applies to any and all cameras.
Field of view has to do with the curvature of the lens, not size. How do you think 360 cameras work? Not with a massive sensor, that’s for sure.
No, field of view is the maximum angle you can cover if you were to trace the cone of what is inside the frame of the sensor/film plan for a given focal length. Focal length is the distance between the nodal point and the film plan/sensor. The nodal point is the point where the light rays all pass through when crossing towards the sensor. For lenses that have multiple elements you still have the same rules as you use the focal point of all the elements cumulated. There is no curvature of a lens.
Idk if this answers your question or not, but this might at least explain some of what’s going on: https://dpreview.com/articles/2668153890/apple-s-iphone-15-and-15-pro-imaging-tech-examined