Magnetic-tunable nanoscale thermal radiation between twisted graphene gratings
Mingjian He, Hong Qi, Yatao Ren, Yijun Zhao, Mauro Antezza

TL;DR
This study theoretically explores how magnetic fields and grating effects in twisted graphene can be used to tune near-field radiative heat transfer, revealing new surface plasmon modes and enhanced modulation capabilities.
Contribution
It introduces the first observation of elliptic SPP modes caused by combined magnetic field and grating effects in graphene systems.
Findings
Near-zero modes are greatly enhanced by magnetic field and grating effects.
Modulation of heat transfer can be achieved by changing magnetic field strength.
The combined effects enable tunable thermal communication in graphene devices.
Abstract
This paper presents a comprehensive theoretical study of the magnetic-tunable near-field radiative heat transfer (NFRHT) between two twisted graphene gratings. As a result of the quantum Hall regime of magneto-optical graphene and the grating effect, three types of graphene surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) modes are observed in the system: near-zero modes, high-frequency hyperbolic modes, and elliptic modes. The elliptic SPPs modes, which are caused by the combined effect of magnetic field and grating, are observed in the graphene grating system for the first time. In addition, the near-zero modes can be greatly enhanced by the combined effect grating and magnetic field, rendering graphene devices promising for thermal communication at ultra-low frequency. In particular, the near-zero modes result in a unique enhancement region of heat transfer, no matter for any twisted angle between…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
