| Literature DB >> 27595609 |
D Ding1, T Kim1, A J Minnich1.
Abstract
Recently, we proposed an active thermal extraction (ATX) scheme that enables thermally populated surface phonon polaritons to escape into the far-field. The concept is based on a fluorescence upconversion process that also occurs in laser cooling of solids (LCS). Here, we present a generalized analysis of our scheme using the theoretical framework for LCS. We show that both LCS and ATX can be described with the same mathematical formalism by replacing the electron-phonon coupling parameter in LCS with the electron-photon coupling parameter in ATX. Using this framework, we compare the ideal efficiency and power extracted for the two schemes and examine the parasitic loss mechanisms. This work advances the application of ATX to manipulate near-field thermal radiation for applications such as temperature sensing and active radiative cooling.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27595609 PMCID: PMC5011705 DOI: 10.1038/srep32744
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Schematic of the concept in laser cooling of solids (LCS). The gain medium consists of rare earth emitters embedded in a host material at a finite temperature. The external pump photons excite the rare-earth emitter, and by absorption of a phonon, carry the energy away as upconverted fluorescence. (b) Energy diagram of the four-level system for LCS. A incident pump laser excitation with energy ħω is shown by the solid orange arrow. The thick dark blue dashed arrows indicate spontaneous emission transitions with a rate of γ and the thin blue dashed arrows indicates the nonradiative decay rates (γ). ε is the electron-phonon coupling rate with the subscript “g” for the ground state manifold |0〉 and |1〉 and “e” for the excited state manifold |2〉 and |3〉, respectively. (c) Schematic showing the concept of active thermal extraction (ATX). A rare-earth doped gain medium is placed in the near-field of a substrate. The external pump photons excite the rare-earth emitter and result in blue-shifted fluorescence due to coupling to the near-field thermal radiation from the substrate, leading to extraction of thermal energy. (d) Energy diagram of the four-level system for ATX. γ is the overall decay rate and W is the absorption and stimulated emission rate for each of the manifold. The subscripts “e” and “g” refer to the same manifolds as (b).
Figure 2(a) Ideal efficiency versus temperature for LCS (dashed line) and ATX (solid line) from Eq. 30. (b) normalized extracted ideal net power versus medium temperature of LCS (dashed line) and ATX (solid line) from the absolute value of Eq. 31. ATX has a higher ideal efficiency than LCS but LCS outperforms ATX for extracted power at lower temperatures.
Figure 3(a) Normalized upconverted power versus temperature for LCS (dashed line) and ATX (solid line) from Eq. 32. (b) Sensitivity of upconverted fluorescence versus sensing temperature of LCS (dashed line) and ATX (solid line) from the absolute value of Eq. 33. ATX has a higher sensitivity than LCS at higher temperatures but LCS outperforms ATX for extracted power for the temperature range considered.