Large Area Near-Field Thermophotovoltaics for Low Temperature Applications
Jennifer Selvidge, Ryan M. France, John Goldsmith, Parth Solanki,, Myles A. Steiner, and Eric J. Tervo

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a large-area near-field thermophotovoltaic device that significantly outperforms far-field devices at low temperatures, showing promise for renewable energy applications through photon tunneling effects.
Contribution
The authors present a novel large-area near-field thermophotovoltaic device with a self-supported emitter-cell pair, achieving substantial power increase via photon tunneling.
Findings
Device generates 1.22 mW at 460°C, 25 times higher than far-field.
Short circuit current densities exceed far-field limits at tested temperatures.
Modeling indicates potential for further power density improvements.
Abstract
Thermophotovoltaics, devices that convert thermal infrared photons to electricity, offer a key pathway for a variety of critical renewable energy technologies including thermal energy storage, waste heat recovery, and direct solar-thermal power generation. However, conventional far-field devices struggle to generate reasonable powers at lower temperatures. Near-field thermophotovoltaics provide a pathway to substantially higher powers by leveraging photon tunneling effects. Here we present a large area near-field thermophotovoltaic device, created with an epitaxial co-fabrication approach, that consists of a self-supported 0.28 cm2 emitter-cell pair with a 150 nm gap. The device generates 1.22 mW at 460 C, a twenty-five-fold increase over the same cell measured in a far-field configuration. Furthermore, the near-field device demonstrates short circuit current densities greater than the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermal Radiation and Cooling Technologies · Advanced Thermodynamic Systems and Engines · Quantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect
