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Integrated near-field thermo-photovoltaics for on-demand heat recycling

Published 23 Nov 2019 in physics.app-ph, cond-mat.mes-hall, and physics.optics | (1911.11137v1)

Abstract: The energy transferred via thermal radiation between two surfaces separated by nanometers distances (near-field) can be much larger than the blackbody limit. However, realizing a reconfigurable platform that utilizes this energy exchange mechanism to generate electricity in industrial and space applications on-demand, remains a challenge. The challenge lies in designing a platform that can separate two surfaces by a small and tunable gap while simultaneously maintaining a large temperature differential. Here, we present a fully integrated, reconfigurable and scalable platform operating in near-field regime that performs controlled heat extraction and energy recycling. Our platform relies on an integrated nano-electromechanical system (NEMS) that enables precise positioning of a large area thermal emitter within nanometers distances from a room-temperature germanium photodetector to form a thermo-photovoltaic (TPV) cell. We show over an order of magnitude higher power generation $\mathrm{P_{gen} \sim 1.25 \, \mu W \cdot cm{-2}}$ from our TPV cell by tuning the gap between a hot emitter ($\mathrm{T_E \sim 880 \, K}$) and the cold photodetector ($\mathrm{T_D \sim 300 \, K}$) from $\mathrm{\sim 500 \, nm}$ to $\mathrm{\sim 100 \, nm}$. The significant enhancement in $\mathrm{P_{gen}}$ at such small distances is a clear indication of near-field heat transfer effect. Our electrostatically controlled NEMS switch consumes negligible tuning power ($\mathrm{P_{gen}/P_{NEMS} \sim 104}$) and relies on conventional silicon-based process technologies.

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