Near-field radiative heat transfer

Near-field radiative heat transfer (NFRHT) is a branch of radiative heat transfer which deals with situations for which the objects and/or distances separating objects are comparable or smaller in scale or to the dominant wavelength of thermal radiation exchanging thermal energy.

In this regime, the assumptions of geometrical optics inherent to classical radiative heat transfer are not valid and the effects of diffraction, interference, and tunneling of electromagnetic waves can dominate the net heat transfer.

The origin of the field of NFRHT is commonly traced to the work of Sergei M. Rytov in the Soviet Union.

[1] Rytov examined the case of a semi-infinite absorbing body separated by a vacuum gap from a near-perfect mirror at zero temperature.

He treated the source of thermal radiation as randomly fluctuating electromagnetic fields.

[2][3][4][5] In 1971, Dirk Polder and Michel Van Hove published the first fully correct formulation of NFRHT between arbitrary non-magnetic media.

[6] They examined the case of two half-spaces separated by a small vacuum gap.

Polder and Van Hove used the fluctuation-dissipation theorem to determine the statistical properties of the randomly fluctuating currents responsible for thermal emission and demonstrated definitively that evanescent waves were responsible for super-Planckian (exceeding the blackbody limit) heat transfer across small gaps.

Since the work of Polder and Van Hove, significant progress has been made in predicting NFRHT.

Theoretical formalisms involving trace formulas,[7] fluctuating surface currents,[8][9] and dyadic Green's functions,[10][11] have all been developed.

NFRHT in other geometries has been addressed primarily through finite element methods.

Meshed surface[8] and volume[18][19][20] methods have been developed which handle arbitrary geometries.

In systems of small particles, the discrete dipole approximation can be applied.

Most modern works on NFRHT express results in the form of a Landauer formula.

is the Boltzmann constant, and The Landauer approach writes the transmission of heat in terms discrete of thermal radiation channels,

NFRHT is sometimes alternatively reported as a linearized conductance, given by[11] For two half-spaces, the radiation channels,

Prediction of radiative heat transfer between two spheres computed using near-field (NFRHT), classical (CRT), and discrete dipole (DDA) methods.