| Literature DB >> 29066840 |
S Lang1, G Sharma2, S Molesky3, P U Kränzien2, T Jalas2, Z Jacob3,4, A Yu Petrov2,5, M Eich2,6.
Abstract
Super-Planckian near-field radiative heat transfer allows effective heat transfer between a hot and a cold body to increase beyond the limits long known for black bodies. Until present, experimental techniques to measure the radiative heat flow relied on steady-state systems. Here, we present a dynamic measurement approach based on the transient plane source technique, which extracts thermal properties from a temperature transient caused by a step input power function. Using this versatile method, that requires only single sided contact, we measure enhanced radiative conduction up to 16 times higher than the blackbody limit on centimeter sized glass samples without any specialized sample preparation or nanofabrication.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29066840 PMCID: PMC5655434 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-14242-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic of experimental setup. (a) Two optical glass disks 20 mm in diameter (substrate and superstrate), separated by micro/nano particle spacers, are placed on the TPS sensor/heater. This setup is called the gap sample. To ensure good thermal contact vacuum suitable thermal paste is used. The construction is placed on a thermal insulator with aluminum foil lying in between (not visible) to minimize heat losses due to conduction and radiation. After the transient has been recorded the upper disk is removed, keeping the remaining setup unchanged, and a reference measurement (b) is made. This setup is called the reference sample. For easier visualization particles size and TPS sensor/heater thickness are shown not to scale. The inset illustrates the situations at the gap/substrate top. The heat flux from hot substrate to cold superstrate through a gap with small size (left) is larger than far-field radiation from the substrate top (right). For thermal radiation the glass disks are opaque.
Figure 3Temperature transients. Sensor/heater temperatures over time for an input power switched on at time t = 0 from 0 to 40 mW. Before the power input started the system was in thermal equilibrium at = 294 K. The samples are composed of (a) fused silica glass disks and (b) BK7 glass disks. The measured gap is (a) 315 nm or (b) 2.75 µm, respectively. When near-field radiative heat transfer is present (gap sample measurement) additional heat escapes the substrate, lowering its temperature relative to the reference sample measurement, during which only far-field radiation is present. The smaller the gap the stronger the cooling of the substrate and the larger the separation of gap sample and reference sample transients. The fitted 1D model curves agree very well with the measured ones.
Figure 2Illustration of the 1D model. The model consists of alternating layers of thermal capacities at absolute temperature and thermal resistances . The system is initially in thermal equilibrium at temperature (). At time = 0 a thermal power of = 40 mW is applied to the TPS sensor/heater. The system loses energy via conduction and radiation to the bottom and via radiation to the top and the sides . The sensor/heater is only a few tens of microns thick in total, and so losses to its sides are neglected. As the model is 1-dimensional, we also inherently assume that radiative heat loss from the sides of the sample does not lead to lateral temperature variations. Such variations are later taken into account by our 2D FDTD model, details in Supplementary Information S5.
Figure 4Gap dependent heat flux. Comparison of theoretical and measured radiative heat transfer coefficients (HTC) versus gap size. The figure shows the heat transfer coefficient (HTC) , normalized by the blackbody result . Colored areas represent the possible range of theoretical heat flux due to uncertainties in the samples’ optical properties. The slightly higher measured values for larger gaps are attributed to conduction through the spheres used as spacers for the gap. Gap size error margins (horizontal) are small for large gaps and thus hardly visible underneath the symbols. Overall strong agreement is observed between theory and experiment. The 16 times enhancement seen for the 150 nm gap sample is presently the largest recorded for centimeter sized samples at ambient temperatures.