Thermal excitation of plasmons for near-field thermophotovoltaics

Y. Guo, S. Molesky, H. Hu, C. L. Cortes, and Z. Jacob, “Thermal excitation of plasmons for near-field thermophotovoltaics”, Applied Physics Letters, vol. 105, no. 7, 2014.
See also: Thermal, Quantum

Abstract

The traditional approaches of exciting plasmons consist of either using electrons (e.g., electron energy loss spectroscopy) or light (Kretchman and Otto geometry) while more recently plasmons have been excited even by single photons. A different approach: thermal excitation of a plasmon resonance at high temperatures using alternate plasmonic media was proposed by S. Molesky et al. [Opt. Express 21, A96–A110 (2013)]. Here, we show how the long-standing search for a high temperature narrowband near-field emitter for thermophotovoltaics can be fulfilled by thermally exciting plasmons. We also describe a method to control Wein's displacement law in the near-field using high temperature epsilon-near-zero metamaterials. Finally, we show that our work opens up an interesting direction of research for the field of slow light: thermal emission control.

Last updated on 05/29/2021