Accurate Direct Measurements of Far-Field Thermal Infrared Emission and its Dynamics
Xiu Liu, Hakan Salihoglu, Xiao Luo, Hyeong Seok Yun, Lin Jing, Bowen, Yu, Sheng Shen

TL;DR
This paper introduces a highly sensitive lock-in FTIR system for direct measurement of far-field thermal infrared emission, enabling accurate, rapid, and low-temperature detection of microdevice dynamics for advanced thermal analysis.
Contribution
The study develops a lock-in FTIR system with significantly improved SNR and speed, allowing direct far-field emission measurements of tiny devices with novel spectra and polarizations.
Findings
Achieved an SNR of 23.7 at 125°C heating temperature.
System response speed up to 175 kHz, extendable to MHz/GHz.
Detected signals at temperatures more than 3 times lower than previous methods.
Abstract
Accurate direct measurements of far-field thermal infrared emission become increasingly important because conventional methods, relying on indirect assessments, such as reflectance/transmittance, are inaccurate or even unfeasible to characterize state-of-art devices with novel spectra, directionalities, and polarizations. The direct collection of the far-field emission from these tiny devices is also challenging because of their shrinking footprints and uncontrollable radiation noises from their surroundings. Here, we demonstrate a microscopic lock-in FTIR system that realizes significant improvement in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) by combining a microscope and a lock-in amplifier with an FTIR. The lock-in FTIR is ultrasensitive, with a specific detectivity 10^6 times higher than commercial ones, to overcome the optical loss and background noise during the emission light collection.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermal Radiation and Cooling Technologies · Photonic and Optical Devices · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
