--------------------
- Radiative heat transfer between metallic gratings using Adaptive Spatial Resolution hal link

Auteur(s): Antezza M.(Corresp.)

Conférence invité: NanoRad 2017 (Thermal Radiation at the nanoscale) (Daejon, KR, 2017-06-24)


Ref HAL: hal-01909518_v1
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé:

Radiative heat transfer between nanostructured objects is a new prolific research line, which open to new heat transfer modulation and amplification possibilities. We will consider the heat transfer between micro/nano-gratings. In particular, we calculate the radiative heat transfer between two identical metallic one-dimensional lamellar gratings [1]. To this aim we present and exploit a modification to the widely-used Fourier modal method, known as adaptive spatial resolution, based on a stretch of the coordinate associated to the periodicity of the grating. We first show that this technique dramatically improves the rate of convergence when calculating the heat flux, allowing to explore smaller separations. We then present a study of heat flux as a function of the grating height, highlighting a remarkable amplification of the exchanged energy, ascribed to the appearance of spoof-plasmon modes, whose behavior is also spectrally investigated. Differently from previous works, our method allows us to explore a range of grating heights extending over several orders of magnitude. By comparing our results to recent studies we find a consistent quantitative disagreement with some previously obtained results going up to 50%. In some cases, this disagreement is explained in terms of an incorrect connection between the reflection operators of the two gratings.