Tungsten Nanowire Based Hyperbolic Metamaterial Emitters for Near-field Thermophotovoltaic Applications
Jui-Yung Chang, Yue Yang, and Liping Wang

TL;DR
This paper theoretically demonstrates that tungsten nanowire hyperbolic metamaterial emitters significantly enhance near-field thermophotovoltaic energy conversion efficiency and power output by leveraging epsilon-near-zero and hyperbolic modes.
Contribution
It introduces a novel tungsten nanowire HMM emitter design and analyzes its impact on TPV performance, showing substantial efficiency improvements over plain tungsten emitters.
Findings
Power output increased by 1.85 times with nanowire HMM at 10 nm gap
Conversion efficiency improved from 19.5% to 31.5% with a thin TPV cell
Maximum efficiency of 32.2% achieved with 3 um thick cell
Abstract
Recently, near-field radiative heat transfer enhancement across nanometer vacuum gaps has been intensively studied between two hyperbolic metamaterials (HMMs) due to unlimited wavevectors and high photonic density of state. In this work, we theoretically analyze the energy conversion performance of a thermophotovoltaic (TPV) cell made of In0.2Ga0.8Sb when paired with a HMM emitter composed of tungsten nanowire arrays embedded in Al2O3 host at nanometer vacuum gaps. Fluctuational electrodynamics integrated with effective medium theory and anisotropic thin-film optics is used to calculate the near-field radiative heat transfer. It is found that the spectral radiative energy is enhanced by the epsilon-near-zero and hyperbolic modes at different polarizations. As a result, the power output from a semi-infinite TPV cell is improved by 1.85 times with the nanowire HMM emitter over that with a…
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