Near-field Radiative Heat Transfer in Many-Body Systems
Svend-Age Biehs, Riccardo Messina, Prashanth S. Venkataram, Alejandro, W. Rodriguez, Juan Carlos Cuevas, Philippe Ben-Abdallah

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in near-field radiative heat transfer in many-body systems, highlighting theoretical frameworks, novel effects, and potential applications at the nanoscale.
Contribution
It extends the Polder and van Hove formalism to N-body systems, providing a unified theory for heat exchange, transport, and dynamics in complex many-body near-field systems.
Findings
Non-additivity of heat flux and related effects
Existence of multistable equilibrium states
Analysis of heat transport regimes in ordered and disordered systems
Abstract
Many-body physics aims to understand emergent properties of systems made of many interacting objects. This article reviews recent progress on the topic of radiative heat transfer in many-body systems consisting of thermal emitters interacting in the near-field regime. Near-field radiative heat transfer is a rapidly emerging field of research in which the cooperative behavior of emitters gives rise to peculiar effects which can be exploited to control heat flow at the nanoscale. Using an extension of the standard Polder and van Hove stochastic formalism to deal with thermally generated fields in -body systems, along with their mutual interactions through multiple scattering, a generalized Landauer-like theory is derived to describe heat exchange mediated by thermal photons in arbitrary reciprocal and non-reciprocal multi-terminal systems. In this review, we use this formalism to…
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