Ultrafast evanescent heat transfer across solid interfaces via hyperbolic phonon polaritons in hexagonal boron nitride
William Hutchins, John A. Tomko, Dan M. Hirt, Saman Zare, Joseph R., Matson, Katja Diaz-Granados, Mingze He, Thomas Pfeifer, Jiahan Li, James, Edgar, Jon-Paul Maria, Joshua D. Caldwell, Patrick E. Hopkins

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates ultrafast heat transfer across solid interfaces using hyperbolic phonon-polaritons in hexagonal boron nitride, surpassing traditional phonon conduction speeds through radiative coupling.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method of interfacial heat transfer leveraging hyperbolic phonon-polaritons, enabling faster energy coupling than conventional phonon-based mechanisms.
Findings
HPhP modes can couple energy across interfaces at speeds much higher than phonon conduction.
Remote excitation of HPhP modes is achieved via broadband radiative coupling.
Heat transfer rates are significantly enhanced through polaritonic coupling, exceeding diffusive phonon speeds.
Abstract
The efficiency of phonon-mediated heat transport is limited by the intrinsic atomistic properties of materials, seemingly providing an upper limit to heat transfer in materials and across their interfaces. The typical speeds of conductive transport, which are inherently limited by the chemical bonds and atomic masses, dictate how quickly heat will move in solids. Given that phonon-polaritons, or coupled phonon-photon modes, can propagate at speeds approaching 1 percent of the speed of light - orders of magnitude faster than transport within a pure diffusive phonon conductor - we demonstrate that volume-confined, hyperbolic phonon-polariton(HPhP) modes supported by many biaxial polar crystals can couple energy across solid-solid interfaces at an order of magnitude higher rates than phonon-phonon conduction alone. Using pump-probe thermoreflectance with a mid-infrared, tunable, probe…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermal Radiation and Cooling Technologies · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Optical properties and cooling technologies in crystalline materials
