| Literature DB >> 28045267 |
Baoan Liu1, Wei Gong1, Bowen Yu1, Pengfei Li1, Sheng Shen1.
Abstract
Thermal radiation with a narrow-band emission spectrum is of great importance in a variety of applications such as infrared sensing, thermophotovoltaics, radiation cooling, and thermal circuits. Although resonant nanophotonic structures such as metamaterials and nanocavities have been demonstrated to achieve the narrow-band thermal emission, maximizing their radiation power toward perfect emission still remains challenging. Here, based on the recently developed quasi-normal mode theory, we prove that thermal emission from a nanoscale transmission line resonator can always be maximized by tuning the waveguiding loss of the resonator or bending the structure. By use of nanoscale transmission line resonators as basic building blocks, we experimentally demonstrate a new type of macroscopic perfect and tunable thermal emitters. Our experimental demonstration in conjunction with the general theoretical framework from the quasi-normal mode theory lays the foundation for designing tunable narrow-band thermal emitters with applications in thermal infrared light sources, thermal management, and infrared sensing and imaging.Keywords: Thermal radiation; optical resonator; perfect emitter; quasi-normal mode; transmission line
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28045267 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b03616
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189