Large enhancement of near-field radiative heat transfer in the dual nanoscale regime enabled by electromagnetic corner and edge modes
Lei Tang, L\'ivia M. Corr\^ea, Mathieu Francoeur, and Chris Dames

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that electromagnetic corner and edge modes significantly enhance near-field radiative heat transfer in the dual nanoscale regime, surpassing traditional limits and opening new avenues for thermal management and energy conversion.
Contribution
It introduces and experimentally verifies a new mechanism where corner and edge modes dominate NFRHT in the dual nanoscale regime, achieving unprecedented heat transfer rates.
Findings
NFRHT coefficient of 830 W/m2K between 20 nm SiC membranes
Corner and edge modes account for 81% of NFRHT
Enhanced NFRHT exceeds blackbody limit by 1400 times
Abstract
It is well established that near-field radiative heat transfer (NFRHT) can exceed Planck's blackbody limit1 by orders of magnitude owing to the tunneling of evanescent electromagnetic frustrated and surface modes2-4, as has been demonstrated experimentally for NFRHT between two large parallel surfaces5-7 and between two subwavelength membranes8,9. However, while nanostructures can also sustain a much richer variety of localized electromagnetic modes at their corners and edges,10,11 the contributions of such additional modes to further enhancing NFRHT remain unexplored. Here, for the first time, we demonstrate both theoretically and experimentally a new physical mechanism of NFRHT mediated by these corner and edge modes, and show it can dominate the NFRHT in the "dual nanoscale regime" in which both the thickness of the emitter and receiver, and their gap spacing, are much smaller than…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermal Radiation and Cooling Technologies · Optical properties and cooling technologies in crystalline materials · Near-Field Optical Microscopy
