Published March 27, 2018 | Version Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Active Radiative Thermal Switching with Graphene Plasmon Resonators

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 2. ROR icon Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • 3. ROR icon Yale University

Abstract

We theoretically demonstrate a near-field radiative thermal switch based on thermally excited surface plasmons in graphene resonators. The high tunability of graphene enables substantial modulation of near-field radiative heat transfer, which, when combined with the use of resonant structures, overcomes the intrinsically broadband nature of thermal radiation. In canonical geometries, we use nonlinear optimization to show that stacked graphene sheets offer improved heat conductance contrast between "ON" and "OFF" switching states and that a >10× higher modulation is achieved between isolated graphene resonators than for parallel graphene sheets. In all cases, we find that carrier mobility is a crucial parameter for the performance of a radiative thermal switch. Furthermore, we derive shape-agnostic analytical approximations for the resonant heat transfer that provide general scaling laws and allow for direct comparison between different resonator geometries dominated by a single mode. The presented scheme is relevant for active thermal management and energy harvesting as well as probing excited-state dynamics at the nanoscale.

Additional Information

© 2018 American Chemical Society. Received: November 20, 2017; Accepted: March 12, 2018; Published: March 12, 2018. O.I., N.H.T., M.C.S, A.J.M., and H.A.A. were supported as part of the DOE "Light-Material Interactions in Energy Conversion" Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under award no. DE-SC0001293. O.I., M.C.S., and H.A.A. acknowledge support from the Northrop Grumman Corporation through NG Next. M.C.S. acknowledges fellowship support from the Resnick Sustainability Institute. O.D.M. was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under award no. FA9550-17-1-0093. T.C. was supported by the Danish Council for Independent Research (grant DFFC6108-00667). M.S. was supported as part of the Army Research Office through the Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies under contract no. W911NF-13-D-0001 (photon management for developing nuclear-TPV and fuel-TPV mm-scale-systems). M.S. was also supported as part of the S3TEC, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the US Department of Energy under grant no. DE-SC0001299 (for fundamental photon transport related to solar TPVs and solar-TEs). The authors declare no competing financial interest.

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Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
85304
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20180314-101708544

Funding

Department of Energy (DOE)
DE-SC0001293
Northrop Grumman Corporation
Resnick Sustainability Institute
Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR)
FA9550-17-1-0093
Danish Council for Independent Research
DFFC6108-00667
Army Research Office (ARO)
W911NF-13-D-0001
Department of Energy (DOE)
DE-SC0001299

Dates

Created
2018-03-15
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2021-11-15
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Caltech groups
Resnick Sustainability Institute