Anomalous Near-Field Heat Transfer between a Cylinder and a Perforated Surface

Citation:

Alejandro W. Rodriguez, M. T. Homer Reid, Jaime Varela, John D. Joannopoulos, Federico Capasso, and Steven G. Johnson. 2013. “Anomalous Near-Field Heat Transfer between a Cylinder and a Perforated Surface.” PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 110, 1.
oe-21-25-31530.pdf1.5 MB

Abstract:

We predict that the near-field radiative heat-transfer rate between a cylinder and a perforated surface depends nonmonotonically on their separation. This anomalous behavior, which arises due to evanescent-wave effects, is explained using a heuristic model based on the interaction of a dipole with a plate. We show that nonmonotonicity depends not only on geometry and temperature but also on material dispersion-for micron and submicron objects, nonmonotonicity is present in polar dielectrics but absent in metals with small skin depths. DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.110.014301
Last updated on 05/29/2020