Strong suppression of near-field radiative heat transfer by superconductivity in NbN
V\v{e}ra Musilov\'a, Tom\'a\v{s} Kr\'al\'ik, Tom\'a\v{s} Fo\v{r}t and, Michal Macek

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that superconductivity in NbN significantly suppresses near-field radiative heat transfer, with a pronounced decrease observed at the superconducting transition, contrasting with minimal effects in the far-field regime.
Contribution
The paper provides extensive experimental data on NbN's near-field and far-field radiative heat transfer, revealing a strong suppression effect due to superconductivity and detailed analysis of mode contributions.
Findings
Up to 8-fold reduction in heat flux in near-field below T_c
Significant contrast between normal and superconducting states in near-field
First experimental observation of destructive interference of thermal radiation in vacuum gap
Abstract
Near-field (NF) radiative heat transfer (RHT) over vacuum space between closely spaced bodies can exceed the Planck far-field (FF) values by orders of magnitude. Strong effect of superconductivity on NF RHT between plane-parallel thin-film surfaces of niobium (Nb) was recently discovered and discussed in a short paper [Kr\'al\'ik et al., Phys. Rev. B 95, 060503 (2017)]. We present here an extensive set of experimental results on NF as well as FF RHT for geometrically identical samples made of niobium nitride (NbN), including a detailed discussion of the experimental setup and errors. The results with NbN show more precise agreement with theory than the original experiments with Nb. We observed a steep decrease of the heat flux at the transition to superconductivity when the colder sample (absorber) passed from normal to superconducting (SC) state ( K), corresponding to…
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