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Probing Near-Field Thermal Radiation between Parallel Plates using MEMS-based Platform Mikyung Lim, Jaeman Song, Seung S Lee, and Bong Jae Lee Department of Mechanical Engineering Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) WE-Heraeus-Seminar: Heat Transfer and Heat Conduction on the Nanoscale Early Experiment on Near-Field Thermal Radiation 2 movoltage stays almost constant. Ref. [19], and that for GaN by the ‘‘reststrahlen’’ formula A theoretical discussion of the heat transfer between an with parameters from Ref. [20], we obtain the dashed lines idealized tip and a flat surface, which may serve as a in Figs. 2 and 3, setting a ! 60 nm. This value is in guideline for the analysis of our data, has been given by accordance with scanning electron microscopy studies of Mulet et al. [12]. These authors have modeled the tip by a the tip and describes both experimental week ending data sets for z * DOI: 10.1038/NPHOTON.2009.144 P Hsphere Y S I of C radius A L rRand EV I NATURE E W theLincident EPHOTONICS TTERS small dielectric assumed 10 nm, as it should. The fact also2005 indicates that the 25 latter NOVEMBER electric field to be uniform inside the sphere, so that it acts use of Eq. (2), i.e., the neglect of the field’sNATURE distortion PHOTONICS by 10 dipole. If the temperature of the 20 102 as a pointlike sample tip, between is justifiedthe here. neglected. Theis totaltheflux surface and the tip significantly 8lower than that of the tip, as in our case, the entirely In thebycase of GaN,directed the theoretical curve for !Pth then is determined the current from the Measurement Monitor &3 −6 mbar 18 can be heat current flowing back from the sample to the tip 6 P ~ ∆T 10 diverges as z for sensor-sample distances below 10 nm. = 21 K tip to the sample, according to In contrast, for Au this familiar behavior would becomeV0 Theory 4 PI apparent only at substantially smaller z [3]. However, the 16 Z Z Piezo supply 1 1 2 experimental data clearly show a different trend, leveling !P ! d! d!""!## "!; !; $; z#; (3) E -4 10 0 0 off to values 0 Piezo accessible distances are5 Hz which for the smallest 14 actuator 0 5 10 15 20 significantly lower than !Pth . We interpret this finding as 1 3 00 2 Challenges in Experimental Demonstrations (1) Thermal conductance (nW K−1) Thermal conductance (nW K−1) LETTERS thermopower VTh [µV] PRL 95, 224301 (2005) LETTER DOI: 10.1038/NPHOTON.2009 Diameter 40 µm 10 where ""!# ! 2!"4%r #&tip =j&tip $ 2j describes the diOptical fibre 12 10 I-V electric properties of the sphere, and the temperature Photodiode convertor FIG. 1 (color online). (a) Cross section of the micropipette -4 entering10 #E is that of the10tip. Taking this expression G = 5 × 104 VA−1 Diameter 22 µm glued into a tip holder. The thermoelectric voltage Vth builds up fc = 100 kHz at a representative frequency !0 , one has !P % -8 d Beamsplitter between the inner platinum wire and 10 the outer gold film. The 2 ""!0 #&08hE i=2, so that, within the scope of the model, tunnel potential is applied between the sample and the grounded -6 Stabilized Heating element be proportional to 10 the heat flux registered by the tip should laser source gold film. (b) Dependence of the thermovoltage on the absorbed the electrical energy density of the flat sample, evaluated, 6 10-10 1 power !P of calibrating laser light for two-9different sensors. -6 10 10-8 10-7however,10 temperature of-81,500 the tip.2,000 2,500 0at the 500 1,000 1 101 102 103 104 10 &8 z/m Figure 1 | Experimental setup. (Red lines are used for the optical part and black lines for the electrical part of the setup.) Reflection of the laser beam on Sphere–plane separation (nm) Sphere–plane separation (nm) For distances larger than about 10 m, our experimencantilever produces an interference pattern. A feedback loop keeps the bimorph–optical fibre distance constant by applying a voltage to a piezoelectric ficient of the scanner. Results of such measurements are (in Watts) tally observed heat transfer is, to good accuracy, proporFIG. 2. Measured heat current !PPhys. between the Figure | Thermal conductance the sphere withthe diameter 40stabilized mm Figure 4Rousseau | Thermal conductance between the sphere andand the plate as a actuator holding the optical fibre.between The feedback loop and thermally laser maintain spurious from the laser constant, ensure that Kittel et al., Rev. 3Lett. (2005) etheating al., Nature Photonics (2009) depicted in Fig. 2 for a sample consisting of a gold layer, tional to the total density asblack given by Eq. (2), notfunction to withofconstant microscope tip and a gold layer (circles) vs tip-sample -10 and the plate as function ofconductance gap distance. The dots represent the gap for two sphere diameters (40 and 22 m m). The blac variations aredistance onlya due toenergy the variations as the separation d is changed, temperature difference DT between the sphere and the 10 -9 -8 -6 and in Fig. 3 for a sample of In both the sensor z. GaN. The dashed line, cases, which coincides with the the solid oneplate fordata larger contribution Since the constant of experimental and the red mounted line the theoretical model. The temperature represent experimental andfibre-actuator the red line issupply. the theoretical model plate.electric The isfield heated and on aalone. piezoelectric actuator. The measured signal is the10voltage applieddata to the 10 10 10-7dots of standard fluctuating z, corresponds to the prediction !P difference between the plate and the sphere is 21 K. The distance shift used The dashed blue line is the asymptotic contribution varying as 1/d. This / m times with Rth ! 54 K=mW has been employed. During theseth proportionality, which carries the dimension ofz area in the comparison is b ¼ 31.8 nm and the cantilever response coefficient contribution is dominant for gaps smaller than 10 nm. For the 22-mmelectrodynamics, based on Eq. (2). The solid line is obtained measurements, we have carefully checked that the cross velocity, may differ substantially ""! focus on 21 from 0 #,Hwe factorin the can be measured independently. found to be diameter a used comparison is HFIG. ¼ 2.162 nWAs nmFig. sphere, the ' smallest separation is 150 nm owing to roughness. . 2We from Eq. (5) with the modified dielectric function (4), setting 3. for a sample of GaN, setting L ! 1:0 Symmetry axis 133106-2 Hu et al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 92, 133106 2 21 : talk between the tunnel current signal and the thermovoltthe density !P chu"z#i, where c is ! %a , 133106-2 with an accuracy of 2%. The conductance is the 2.30 scaled nW nm energy &10 &8 s is clearly shown in Figure 3B, L ! Ltip ! 1:2 ' 10&8 m. th etLal. mHu and m. 10 tip ! 1:2 ' 10 and the near-field contribution sum of the far-field contribution G have found that the experimental data for different approach curves the data agree with the theory in the range 2.5 mm to 30 nm. T remains negligibly small. The absence of interference d age radiation is strongly enhanced ff the velocity of light, and employ the effective sensor area d (d)/DT H are shifted. A microscope image of the sphere shows a characteristic agreement with theory confirms that radiative heat transfer can 224301-3 2 ubstrate are bothby made polar is indicated theoffact that the tunnel current decreases %a as a fitting parameter. Modeling the dielectric function roughness of !40 nm, which is consistent with the shifts observed significantly enhanced at distances in the nanometre regime. O ared to our previous publication strongly in a range of distances where the observed ther&"!# fordifferent Au bycurves. a Drude ansatzfor with H between To account thisparameters roughness, wetaken intro- from results strongly rsupport previous theoretical works and pave G ðdÞ ¼ Gff þ dðdÞ ð1Þ stem to precisely control the gap movoltage stays almost constant. duce [19], a shift and b when comparing experimental data of each way to engineering radiative heat transfer in the mesosco Ref. thatexp for GaN the byDT the ‘‘reststrahlen’’ formula ~ leads to much less scatter in the approach curve with from the theoretical conductance: regime. Possible applications include d (r) nano-electro-mechani A theoretical discussion of the heat transfer between an with parameters Ref. [20], we obtain the dashed lines d o pushed the gap down to ∼30 systems, heat-assisted magnetic recording29 or heat-assisted lith The theoretical model of the near-field heat transfer is now disidealized tip and a flat surface, which may serve as a in Figs. 2 andbetween 3, setting a ! 60 nm. This value is graphy. in Further aspects of radiative heat transfer at the nanosc terials (metal and semiconductor) cussed. The flux the¼ sphere the plate is locally Gff þ Hand dðdÞ=DT ð3Þ Gtheo ðd þ b; TÞ 3 guideline for the analysis of our data, has been given by accordance with scanning electron microscopy studies of remain explored. For example, it has been predicted that b to10be described as a flux between two parallel plates separated by a disan be drawn on surface wave flux can be quasi-monochromatic21,30 and strongly depends Mulet et al. [12]. These authors have modeled the tip by a tancetip d using the heat transfer coefficient h(d,T ) derived numerithe and describes both experimental data sets for z * Figure aiscomparison of the with the model for a par7,213. shows 22 the matching between the optical properties of both materi This knownThe as thedata Derjaguin approximation callynm, smallcalculation dielectricfor sphere of radius r and assumed the incident 10 as it should. latter fact also indicates that"b! the oretical the nearticular approach curve. Because the noise on the cantilever bending FIG. 2. "Color online! "a! A schematic drawing of the experiment setup. (Fig. 2a). We integrate over the whole area to obtain the theoretical The understanding of the role of non-local effects at distan microsphere and atoplate becausesetup. field beexperimental uniform inside the sphere, so that it acts measurements was below 0.1 nm, we prefer tothe consider H as a fitting smaller use Eq. (2), i.e., the neglect field’s distortion by than 10 nm is also a subject under examination in reelectric 2. Schematic diagram of The thermal Aof scanning electron microscope image ofof polystyrene particles. conductance: or isAa asimilar silicon nitride AFM cantilever coated a 70 nm 8,10,31 parameter so that the calculated curve shape and the one given by s.as situation occurs inthe with pointlike dipole. If temperature of the sample is , so further experiments are needed in this field. literature the tip, is justified here. film. 20,21 A laser beam (650 nm wavelength, 3 mW output power) 102 setup. "b! ðonline! experimental data can2.be"Color best compared. scaling factor found FIG. "a!The A schematic drawing of the experiment R ent. So, for the sphere-plate cused on the tip of thelower cantilever and reflected a PSD. significantly than that ofontothe tip, as in our case, the In thethiscase ofðd;isGaN, the theoretical curve for !Pthparticles. FIG. 3. Measured radiative heat flux between the two optical fl 21 ~gap . This value following method H¼ 2.162+0.005 nWdr nm TÞ h½dðrÞ; T&2pr ð2Þthe Received AGtheo scanning electron microscope image of5polystyrene = 24 ° C!, respectively. As the decreases below ! m, ication of voltage to the piezoelectric translation results diation is estimated by the so-fromstage 13 May 2009; accepted 25 July 2009; &3 21 heat current flowing back the sample to the tip can be diverges as z for sensor-sample distances below 10 nm. 0 is consistent with coefficient the calibration value H ¼ 2.30the nW nm found e movement of the substrate toward the sphere. In near-field, 22 heat transfer starts to exceed blackbody limit. published online 23 August 2009 rem that approximates curved Figure 4. Equivalent sphere-plate near-field heat transfer coefce phonon polaritons can tunnel through the gap and they thus for contrast, another cantilever the same batch but with different exact pcontinues ffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffi ffi In for Auof this familiar would become As the gap shrinks even more, coefficient et al., Nano (2009) Hu et al., Appl. Lett. (2008) 2 ' r 2 is to ~thebehavior at areas and to using the known ficantly contribute the radiative heat transfer. Theficients “cooling” With the feedback control, thePhys. temperature the heatin normalized to theShen area 2πRd versus the gap for where RLett. is distance the radius ofathe sphere and dðrÞ ¼ d þ Ris' Ryielding dimensions. Indeed, the cantilever length dispersion 10%, FIG. 3. Measuredofradiative he apparent only=sphere. at smaller zthe [3]. However, the t on the between cantilever due to the enhanced radiation grow, owing to substantially enhanced tunneling of the surface waves. 24 ° C!, respectively. As gap decreases below 5 ! m, the µm (blue circles) and a 50 µm (violet triangles) diameter iation parallel surfacesnear-field100 can be set to a value with variations within 1 ° C. Th References the local distance between the plane and the sphere surface (Fig. 2a). an H dispersion of 30%. 1 to the bending of the cantilever. Inset: A scanning electron 10 & Van Hove, M. Theory of radiative heat transfer between close m, coefficient is more than 50% than 1in ! 1. blackbody Polder, D. experimental data clearly show asmaller different leveling The flat line is the limit predicted by Planck’s blackbody radiation ForItAround two infinite planes and forsphere–plane distances than dtrend, ¼higher 500 nm, surfaces of limit. the optical flats are wrapped with aluminu near-field conductance, Far-field heat transfer coefficient starts to exceed the is seen Fig. 3the that the conductance increases oscope imageradiative of a glass mounted on an AFM cantilever. 3 -4 sphere spaced bodies. Phys. Rev. B 4, 3303–3314 (1971). 2 -6 absorbed power ∆P [µW] 10 law. The dashed line is the near-field heat transfer coefficients 21 blackbody which is readily measurable in the short distance regime. If without we retainthe the the flux increases aslimit, 1/d Thermal conductance (nW K−1) ∆P / W ∆P / W (b) % " kz Þ( '; (5) " kz Þ( '; (6) completely consistent with thermal conduction through theHeat Macor spacer andthe thevacuum rest of the for the hot flow over gapsupport is absorbed by the cold plate in parallel with radiation from the rear surface of thethrough a sample and sinks into the liquid helium bath plate. The vacuum chamber is held at constant temperature calibrated thermal resistor, serving as a heat flow meter. of 30:0 + C (303.2 K). The hot plate is brought close to the nm thick layer of sputtered copper. These space. mately Wien’s200 displacement law predicts that &max ) coatings have areas about 1 mm2 and serve as capacitor 9 'm atplates T ¼that 310are K. read by four 24-bit capacitance-to-digital Figure 2 showscircuits a sketch of to ourmeasure apparatus. is designed converter [15] the Itseparation and 3 around angular two 50 * 50 * 5 mmofsapphire plates. haveis misalignments the plates. The These metal film a specified flatness of &=8 nmofperthe inch on the to largest wrapped around to @ the633 sides sapphire allow to that the electrodes. surfaceselectrical and are contact cut such the c axis is perpendicular to Challenges in Experimental Demonstrations (2) $? come from ! ! 2 ! ! ! ; (7) ! ! ! High temperature stability of the foot of the thermal resistor together with a resolution of 50 !K of the temperature measurement enabled us to measure heat flows from 20 nW to 1 mW. Keeping the cold sample at # 5 K, experimental results were obtained at varying distances d between surfaces at constant temperature T2 of the hot sample (Fig. 2), and vice versa, with varying T2 at constant d. All measured data are collected in Fig. 2 where the heat flux normalized to the blackbody emissive power, q=qBB , qBB ¼ "B ðT24 ! T14 Þ, is plotted as a function of T2 d. The inset of Fig. 2 shows absolute values of measured heat fluxes obtained at T2 ¼ 20 K. The near-field values, theoretical and experimental, follow approximately the same dependence (Fig. 2). We can observe the onset of the near-field effect at T2 d0 # 1000 K !m. Comparing it to the wavelength #m from Wien’s displacement law, T#m # 3000 K !m, we get d0 # #m =3 (d0 # 50 !m at T2 ¼ 20 K, for example). Calculations of theoretical values were doneOttens for tunget al., Phys. Rev. Lett. (2011) FIG. 3 (color online). Heat-transfer coefficient vs distance. week ending 2 sten layers 150 nm thick characterized by permittivity , K from the The curves are each offset vertically by 2 W=m LETTERS 30 NOVEMBER 2012 q/qBB [%] (5 mm by 5 mm) Sapphire plates q [W/m2] The cold plate is glued to a copper disk, which in turn is attached to the experimental structure. The Macor spacer on the back of the hot plate is attached to a modified ! ! 2 ! ! kinematic mirror mount which allows for z-axis linear ! ; (8) ! ! ! movement and tip and tilt angular adjustment by turning the three adjustment screws in the back. Three stepper for the medium and motors turn screws on the kinematic mount via gear reduction boxes; each motor step translates to a linear movement ffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffi of the hot plate by 35 nm. The components are held together by an ‘‘L’’ shaped backbone (not shown) to give (9) " #2 ; rigidity. The assembly is located in a UHV chamber, with a ffiffiffiffiffiffiffi base pressure below 2 ! 10"7 Torr, making gas conduc2 tion negligible. Signals to the stepper motors, capacitance =c : (10) readouts, temperature readouts, and current and voltages to maginary above the the heater are all controlled and/or read by a LABVIEW computer program. oefficients T ev and k Each pair of capacitor plates is calibrated by taking eflection coefficients capacitance readings as the plates are driven together eory to calculate the one step of the stepper motorsapparatus. at a time. Stepper A fit is motors made to FIG. 2 (color online). Experimental pphire plates, using C ¼ !0 a=d Cstray wheretip, !0 and is the constant of allow adjustment ofþthe spacing, tiltdielectric (read capacitively) 14]. sapphire plates. Thecapacitor temperature of part the hotisthe is the vacuum, aScheme is the and Cstray aplate parallel FIG.of1 two (color online). of the area, central of meathe model for z-cut controlled by a feedback circuit, and the power required to contribution independent of separation. The data fit the H Y plane-parallelism SICAL REVIEW surement chamber samples withP the PRL 109, containing 224302 (2012) 2 heat transfer from o media are Thot ¼ maintainequation a temperature gives values ofgreater than above difference very well, with R one below; their zeros are indicated by the horizontal lines equalizer (PPE). Differential screw sets the the positions the static extending from the leftgap axis. The points term dominates at the hot plate the cold thermal 6 the 0.999.toThe fittedplate valueand of toa the equals the bath. metalized areaHeat flow over vacuum is absorbed by are the the colddata, with error 10 part of the PPE which is attached to the sample holder at the Measured Theoretical determined from theThelium scatter in the heat-transfer sample bars and sinks into the liquid bath through ad = 50 µmeasurewithin our knowledge of this area: Cstray % 0:4 pF. The T2 = 20 K m Near field 2 = 10 K end of the sample suspension. The static and movable parts of ments and the uncertainty in the distance calibration. The calibrated thermal resistor, servingT as a heat Tflow meter.d = 300 µm solid Far field average capacitance gives the distance while the individual 2 = 12 K 2 = 30 K PPE are coupled via three friction locks realized by three pairs of lines are the theoretical predictions for flat plates while the Total 014301-2 High temperature stability of the foot the thermal T2 = of 15 K T2 = 40 Kresis-d = 500 µm readings are used to correct the alignment by sending steps 105 dashed are the of theoretical for slightly curved tor together withlines a resolution 50 !K ofpredictions the temperature polished pins pressed against each other with a spring. When the T2=20 K (Data set 1) to the motors controlling tip and tilt. plates enabled (see text). Each measured measurement us to measure heat flows has froma reproducible T2=20 K (Data set 2) 100curve sample suspension is shifted downwards until the contact beTo obtain the heat-transfer coefficient we compute addendum due to other heat leaks which are not included in the Theoretical, 20 nW to 1 mW. 4 tween samples is achieved, and shifted further, the friction locks T2=20 K,The T1=5 K : 10cold W ¼ P=½AðThot " Tcold Þ), where P is the power dissipatedKeeping model and sample which athas subtracted from the # 5been K, experimental resultsthe data. -1 10 Total slip and plane parallelism samples is set. of in the heater, Abetween is the plate surface area,Both and parts Thot and temperatures are distances (top to bottom; hot–cold): 327.0–308.0 K, were obtained at varying d between surfaces at Near field the PPE areTcold thermally by the a soft braid. Far field are theinterconnected temperatures of hotcopper and cold plates, 317.0–305.8 K, and constant322.0–307.0 temperature K, T2 of the hot sample (Fig.312.0–305.2 2), and viceK. 3 10 10-2 data are versa, with varying T2 at constant d. All measured collected in Fig. 2 where the heat flux normalized to the 014301-3emissive power, q=q , q ¼ " -3ðT 4 ! T 4 Þ, is The whole apparatus was immersed in liquid helium blackbody BB BB B 2 1 10 2 which cools the measurement chamber below 5 K. Vacuum plotted as a 10 function of T2 d. The inset of Fig. 2 shows absolute values of measured heat fluxes -4obtained at was maintained by cryopumping at a pressure lower than 10 T2 ¼ 20 K. 10!8 Pa, reducing thus the heat transfer by molecular flow 1 The near-field values, theoretical and experimental, 100 101 10 below measurable values. follow approximately the same dependence (Fig. 2). We can observe the onset of the near-field effect at T2 d0 # After cooldown of the apparatus, the samples are set in 1000 K !m. Comparing it to the wavelength #m from plane-parallel position with zero gap (Fig. 1). Once plane 100 Wien’s displacement law, T#m # 3000 K !m, we get parallelism was adjusted, the hot sample was moved up ¼ 220 K, for example). d0 # #m =3 (d0 # 10150 !m at T2 10 103 Calculations of theoretical values were done for tunginto the starting position about 200 !m above the cold T d FIG. 1 (color online). Scheme of the central part of the mea2 [K µm] sten layers 150 nm thick characterized by permittivity surement chamber samples with plane-parallelism sample. The zero gap containing was detected bythedisappearance of equalizer (PPE). Differential screw sets the positions of the static the electric contact between samples. Preservation of the part of the PPE which is attached to the sample holder at the end of the sample suspension. The static movable parts of plane-parallel position is ensured by and two flexure memPPE are coupled via three friction locks realized by three pairs of branes, part of hot sample suspension, that bear the sample 106 105 Corrected for concavity 0.7 µm d [µ m] 104 102 105 Kralik et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. (2012) FIG. 2 (color online). Experimental and theoretical data on Measured Theoretical T = 10 K Tvacuum = 20 K d =gap 50 m d #Near field heat transfer over 1–300 !m between samples T = 12 K T = 30 K d = 300 m Far field with 150 nm thick tungsten layers on polished alumina substrate. T = 15 K T = 40 K d = 500 m Total µ 2 2 2 2 µ 2 2 µ 4 its temperature (i.e., its electrical resistance). The performed using a Fourier modal method basedmeasuring on the dimensions), we expect the heat transfer to be proportional to Figure 1. (a) Schematic representation of the experiment. At small 19 fluctuational electrodynamics formalism,30,31 considering beams of1/gap inverse the 2,slope of thisplates. temperature vs value electrical power as for parallel The far-field in Figure 1b is gap, evanescent surface polariton resonances at the SiO2 surfaces 3 cross section of 200 μm length and 500 nm × 1.1 μm a b 10 measurement yields the background conduction, in units of MEMS off MEMS on the total far-field emission, integrated over all directions and all couple to enable near-field radiative heat transfer between the (including a 100 nm thick SiO2 coating). The temperature frequencies, for a nanobeam maintained at 130 K above room is used nanobeams. Si3N4 is used for mechanical purposes, whileVPt Watt/K. We obtain conduction values of σ = 237 nW/K and VMEMS Simulation fix MEMS Vsense (Vsensor. 102 K (as in our temperature. S) both as a resistive heater and a temperature (b) Theoretical VS difference between the nanobeams is 130 This value is heated calculated by the modal σ = 107 nW/K for the fixed beam andFourier the mobile 1.54 mob experimental results), with the mobile sensing beam maintained 1/d fitfor a periodic array of nanobeams prediction of the heat transfer between two nanobeams of 200 μm analysis method with sensing respectively. Using these values and thea at room temperature. Repeating the near-field while beam, 101simulation length and 500 nm × 1.1 μm cross-section. The SiO2 thickness in this periodicity much larger than the size of nanobeams, such that replacing the Si3N4 core with SiO2 shows that the Sitemperature case is 100 nm. Figurewith4, each we other. obtain the heat transfer 3N4 core theydata do notofinteract Heat transfer (nW K−1) MEMS-based Measurements (1 D (3 T h LETTERS 0 200 400 600 800 1,000 1,200 1,400 1,600 (nm) Enh vers translation best fitsbetween the experimental data is +49 nm 10 µm mechanical stability at high temperatures. between two nanobeams as a functionthat of distance them. The hot 200 nm 1 µm radiative heat transfer Silicon (to be removed)b, Simulated 6972 dx.doi.org/10.1021/nl503236k | Nano Lett. 2014, 14, 6971−6975 horizontally and +1.49 nW/K vertically. After fitting, the theory Gap (nm) beam is set at T = 10 K above room temperature (293 K). The deep subwavelength regime occurs for beam separation below 200 nm, where the heat is found to correspond closely with the experimental data. 1.54 transfer to scaleelectrical as 1/d heaters/temperature (which appearssensors linear are on used a logarithmic scale).two c, parallel Simulated heat transfer spectrum between the nanobeams at two different inciple. MEMSbegins with integrated to bring together Slight discrepancies between theory and measurements most St-Gelais et al., Nature Nanotech. (2016) 120 b a 120 separations. For da,=Schematic 50 nm, the heat transfer is concentrated mainly around the SiC surface resonance (near ω = 937 cm−1). The secondary peaks at lower gth heat transfer regime. of the MEMS geometry (not to scale) and operation principle. Applying likely arise from deviation of the beam cross-section from the Minimum gapstructural release. e, SEM caused the presence of Si3nm N4initially and SiO scanning electron micrographperfectly (SEM) ofrectangular thenear-field device shape after drivefrequencies closes the gapare between theby nanobeams, from 1,500 (left) to False-colour sub-100 nm (right). A Vheat 2. d, considered in the simulations (see 100 Enhancement versus far-field 100 whilefalse-colour the Vsens voltage on the otherview beamofallows for temperature sensing. High tensile stress allows for cross-section the nanobeams before structural release. Figure 2d). The 1.49 nW/K susbtrate conduction obtained Simulated radiative heat transfer between two nanobeams as a function of distance between them. The hot ■ C * N T ■ T so si su b C su 1 o is E th NAT Heat transfer (nW K−1) Power density (pW K−1 cm) Heat transfer (nW K−1) Power density (pW K−1 cm) 0 has a negligible effect on the heat transfer10compared withlimit a a function Far-field power as of the isnanobeam (see Figure 5). The structure fabricatedseparation using conventional nanobeam that would be made entirely of SiO2. The insensitivity of fabrication processes, which consist of low pressure chemical 10−1the surface wave vapor deposition (LPCVD) of SiO and Si N , and electronheat transfer to the core material results from Tensile 2 3 4 1 dominates102 nature of the SiO2 surface phonon-polariton 10 that stress Gap 103 of platinum 104resistors and aluminum electrical beam evaporation heat transfer at small gaps. In the gap range of Figure 1b, the contacts. The fabrication process begins with the successive Gap (nm) heat transfer power approximately scales as 1/gap1.68. At much deposition of 100 nm of SiO2, 300 nm of Si3N4, and 100 nm of NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY DOI: 10.1038/NNANO.2016.20 smaller distances (i.e., distances much smaller than the beam SiO SiC −1) a virgin wafer. The MEMS and nanobeams are cmsilicon 2 on (937 c dimensions), we expect the heat transfer to be proportional to then defined by deep ultraviolet lithography and etched in 8 in Figure 1b is 2, Siparallel 3N4, SiC 1/gap2,SiO as for plates.19 The far-field value b CHF3 + O2 chemistry using an inductively coupled plasma 103 50 nm gap MEMS on the total far-field emission, integrated over all directions and all reactive ion etching ÷ 50(ICP-RIE) reactor. Following this etch 1,500 nm VMEMS VMEMS Simulationfor a nanobeam maintained at 130 6 K above room gap frequencies, 102 VS Platinum step, a third layer of SiO2 is deposited, again by LPCVD, in 1/d1.54 fit This value is calculated by the Fourier modal temperature. order to conformally cover the sidewalls of the etched 101 4 analysis method for a periodic array of nanobeams with a structures. This layer is then anisotropically etched (using the periodicity much larger than the size of nanobeams, such that same ICP-RIE chemistry) to clear the bottom of the trenches 100 Far-field limit 2 they do not interact with each other. for subsequent isotropic release, while leaving some SiO2 on The structure is fabricated using conventional nano- the sidewalls of the nanobeams (see the final nanobeams cross 10−1 0 of thechemical 2. (a) (not to scale)consist and electrical twofabrication processes, of lowcircuit pressure 101 102Figure 103Schematic 104 which section in Figure 2d). Platinum and aluminum are then system integrated with theofMEMS actuator. (b) Schematic Vnanobeam vapor deposition (LPCVD) SiO and Si N , and electron200 400 600 800 1,000 1,400 2 3 4 H Gap (nm) Figure 5. Heat transfer power1,200 between thedefined nanobeams as a function of successively deposited over the structure by electron (notbeam to scale) of the MEMS displacement. electron St-Gelais et al., Nano Lett. (2014) Vheat (VH) evaporation of platinum resistors(c) andScanning aluminum electrical −1 beam evaporation and lift-off. The aluminum layer is chosen to their separation distance. Substrate conduction is found to account for ) Frequency (cm VMEMS VMEMS micrographs −1 (SEM) of the device. (d) False color SEM of the SiC (937 cmThe ) fabrication process begins with the successive contacts. c be much thicker (250transfer nm) than the smallest platinum gap. layerNear-field (60 nm), less than 15% of the total heat at the nanobeam cross section prior to substrate removal. SiO2, Si3N4, SiC 8 deposition of 100 nm of SiO2, 300 nm of Si3N4, and 100 nm of such that the resistance of the aluminum contacts is negligible heat transfer is also found to be 7 times stronger than the far-field limit 50 nm gap e a virgin d SiO2 on ÷ 50 silicon wafer. The MEMS and nanobeams are compared with the platinumSiO 2 for the resistors. Thecurrent highergeometry electrical 1,500 nm gap (1.7 above the substrate conduction, Platinum heaters/ 6 lithography and etchednW/K in conductivity Platinum MEMS comb drive then defined by deep ultraviolet of aluminum, relative to platinum, also contributes and temperatures). temperature sensors CHF3 + O2 chemistry using inductively coupled plasma actuator 4 aan reactor. SiC Si3N4 40 reactive ion etching (ICP-RIE) Following this etch 6972 dx.doi.org/10.1021/nl503236k | Nano Lett. 2014, 14, 6971−6975 Experiment In Figure step, a third layer of SiO2 is deposited, again by LPCVD, in 5, the horizontal error bars correspond to the error 2 Tunable gap of theonetched order to conformally cover the sidewalls Simulation the measurement of the MEMS SiO2 displacement (see Figure 0 30 etched (using structures. This layer is then anisotropically the 3). Vertical error bars are not visible, as they are determined by VH 200 400 600 800 1,200 1,400 10 same1,000 ICP-RIE chemistry) to clear the bottom of the trenches the very high resolution of the Agilent device parameter −1) VMEMS VMEMS subsequent isotropic release, while leaving some SiO2 on 10Frequency µm for (cm 200 nm 1 µm Silicon (to be removed) analyzer. the sidewalls of the nanobeams (see the 20 final nanobeams cross The theory curve is the same as in Figure 1, but is now 1 Figure 2. (a) Schematic (not to scale) and electrical circuit of the twoFar-field limit to best fit the experimental e and vertically section in Figure 2d). are then horizontally SiO2 Platinum and aluminum translated nanobeam system integrated with the Platinum MEMS actuator. heaters/(b) Schematic successively deposited over the defined structure by electron data. The horizontal translation is included to account from our comb drive (not to scale) of the MEMS displacement. (c)sensors Scanning electron temperature Figure 1 | (SEM) Deviceofoverview and operating principle. MEMS with integrated electrical heaters/temperature sensors are used to bring together parallel beam evaporation and lift-off. The aluminum layer is chosen to 10 0.1 or micrographs the device. (d) False color SEM of the uncertainty on the initial distance (d0)two between the beams (see SiC Si3N4 be much thicker (250 nm) of thanthe theMEMS platinum layer (60 nm), nanobeam cross and section prior the to substrate removal. 100 1,000 nanobeams reach deep subwavelength heat transfer regime. a, Schematic geometry (not to scale) and operation principle. Applying a discussion related to Figure 3 and the MEMS displacement such that the resistance of the aluminum contacts is negligible Tunable gap voltage (VMEMS) on the interdigitated comb drive closes the gap betweenSiO the2platinum nanobeams, from 1,500 nm initially (left) to sub-100 (right).translation A Vheat while the nm vertical accounts for compared with the resistors. The electrical 0 higher measurement), spurious conduction of heat the substrate. The voltage is applied to heat one of the beams, while the Vsensconductivity voltage on other relative beam allows for temperature sensing. High tensile stressthrough allows for of the aluminum, to platinum, also contributes 5 ■ ( ( 18 ( ( 10 ( 12 ( 93 ( J. ( 29 ( Jo 2 ( H ∆z 6 Gap ( 2.5 nm 20 MEMS-based Measurements (2) LETTERS a NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY 150 100 Laser SiO2 film receiver Ta Qrad,2f Idc,out t Gap Qrad,2f 0 Ta Pt heater Qcon,2f + Qjoule,2f − ∆Trec (mK) c Contact Au V2f − 50 45 I f,ou Stiff Si beam Piezoelectric actuation Piezoelectric actuation t d 200 µm Contact e 200 µm 30 Laser 100 µm If,in V− If,out 50 µm 8 10 3 µm 2 µm 1 µm 100 nm 50 nm Au 10 8 6 4 2 0 20 SiO2 film 1 min 6 12 Rib 15 V+ 4 Gap (µm) SiNx + 60 c 2 Rib n I dc,i Stiff ribbed SiNx beam V3f 0 b PSD If,in 4 DOI: 10.1038/NNANO.2015.6 Near-field conductance (nW K−1) Optical signal (mV) 0 100 1,000 10,000 Gap (nm) θy Parallel z-Piezo b 25 eld conductance (nW K−1) 15 K−1) –1 Deviation from flatness (nm) Deviation from flatness (nm) Height (nm) Total heat transfer efficient (W m−2 K−1) a Height (nm) 80 loop feedback control (Supplementary Fig. 6). The top panel of receivers coated with aθx 100-nm-thick SiO2 layer and measured Fig. 2a shows the displacement, Δz , of the emitter towards the recei- GNF (Fig. 2c, green solid circles). Intriguingly, the near-field Pt heater ver, which begins with coarse steps (∼5 nm) and continues in finer thermal conductance for these devices remains largely unchanged 60 steps (∼2.5 nm) close to contact. Throughout thee approach the when the gap is reduced to well below 1 µm, and only begins to f 50 µm Emitter 25 300 nm. When the gap size optical signal (middle panel) does not change until contact is estab- increase 25 noticeably with gaps below 40 increases rapidly and becomes lished. Finally, thed bottom panel presents ΔTrec , which increases approaches the film thickness, GNFBulk monotonically until contact 106 is made. Contact is heralded by a comparable to that obtained for 3-μm-thick SiO2 films at gaps 3 µmthe dependence of GNF20 on sudden change in the optical deflection signal, which occurs con- less than 100 nm. To better understand 20 µm additional experiments for layer Thin SiO thickness, we performed SiO2Au currently (that is, within the same 2.5 nm displacement step) with 20 µm −30 −30 2 µm 50 2 50 a large jump in ΔTrec due to conduction of heat from0 the silica thicknesses of 500 nm, 1 µm and 2 µm (Fig. 2c, all data points refilm 0 10 20 present 0 sphere to the receiver. 50 µm an average0 of ∼1010 independent 30d 40 20 301 µm 40 measurements). It is clear 75 µm Scan lengthfrom (µm) these experimentsScan length that G(µm) These experimental data allowed us to determine the gapNF for each device depends on the 4 100 nm 10 SiO2of the coating and begins to increase rapidly only when dependent, radiative thermal conductance as Ggap = Gbeams × thickness Figure 1 | Microdevices for probing near-field radiation between parallel-planar surfaces. a, Scanning electron microscope (SEM) image of the receiver ΔTrec/(ΔT the gap size becomes comparable to the thickness. We also emit–ΔTrec). We obtained the near-field thermal conducnmfilm device, which features a 80 µm × 80 µm region coated with a desired dielectric/metallic film (false-coloured in blue). b, SEM image of 50 the emitter, which gap by subtracting the gap-dependent far-field performed a control experiment where the receiver had only a tance (Gfeatures NF) ata each 48 µm × 48 µm mesa-shaped region coated with SiO2 or Au (top of mesa false-coloured in red). Both emitter and receiver devices are suspended Auof theThe results of this expercontribution, which estimated thethermal thermal conductance 100-nm-thick Au filmshowing and no by long and narrowwas Si beams to achievefrom excellent isolation (Supplementary Sections 1 and 2). c, Schematic theSiO orientation emitter 2 coating. and receiver devices with gap respectsizes to each(∼ other. The relative of the emitter and receiver (inset) can be controlled custom-built 10 µm) and alignment the calculated iment (solid olive squares inusing Fig. a2c) show that there is no measurable at the largest measured c 22 nanopositioner that factor enables2lateral (θz ) of the emitter as well control the receiver about the x, y and z axes. x, θy ) of gap-dependent view (Fig.and2bangular andcontrol Supplementary Fig. 7).as angular increase in(θG NF as the gap size decreases. Taken together, our obser10the d, Optical images showing emitter and receiver devices. e, Line profile of the active region of the emitter showing the negligible deviation from planarity for the 3-µm-thick layer of SiO as a function surfaces vations suggest that surface phonon polaritons on the SiO The estimated G NF 2 2 along the dashed line of the inset. Inset: topography obtained using atomic force microscopy. f, As in e, but for the receiver. Small deviations from planarity of gap ofsize is nm shown in µmFig. (green open circles). Clearly, responsible forthethe observed, gap-dependent GNF behaviour. ∼30–40 over a 40 × 40 2c µm region can be seen (dashed line aligned with theare centre line parallel to x axis of the receiver). Derjaguin approximation 20 15 10 100 1,000 d 10,000 Gap size (nm) 10−12 Bulk −15 3 µm10 2 µm 1 µm 10−18 100 nm 0.0 50 nm Au 0.5 Freq Song et al., Nature Nanotech. (2016) d 10−9 Experimental data Ideal parallel planes Modelled plates s) Misaligned Ta 1 Alignment mark 2 Hz Joule heating Total gap thermal conductance (nW K−1) x 50 µm Spectral conductance (nW K−1 rad−1 s) NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY DOI:Song 10.1038/NNANO.2016.17 et al., Nature Nanotech. (2015) Figure 2LETTERS | Gap-dependent near-field thermal conductance of thin films. a, Simultaneous recording of displacement, Δz, of the emitter towards the receiver (top), optical contact signal (middle) and temperature increase in the receiver (bottom). During the final approach, piezo displacementb steps of ∼2.5 nm d = 50 nm were used. b, Contribution of far-field radiation to the radiative thermal conductance across the gap for a representative film data (100 nm). The solid red line Experimental d = 100 nm −6 Ideal parallel planes 10 factor. d = 500 nm describes the predicted far-field radiation, which increases weakly (<1 nW K ) with decreasing gap size due to the associated change in view d = 1 µm Modelled plates As expected, the measured data (multiple runs, green symbols) agree well with the far-field prediction for gaps from 1 to 10 µm. c, Near-field thermal d = 10 µm Blackbody limit Blackbody 48 μm x 48 μm conductance as awithfunction of film thicknesses. Data for each film thickness represent an average of ∼10 different data sets. See Supplementary Fig. 7 for towards the receiver a piezoelectric actuator. Nanometre- GNF increases rapidly from ∼0 to 12 nW K−1 as the gap size 100is 10−9 b Grey body precise displacements werethe achieved by monitoring the movement reduced to ∼20 nm. information about standard deviation of the data. 48 μm x 48 μm To investigate the effect of film thickness on NFRHT we used of the actuator with integrated strain gauge sensors under closedFigure 1 | Experimental set-up and devices. a, Schematic of the experimental set-up. The emitter consists of a suspended silicon platform, with an attached silica sphere and an integrated electrical heater–thermometer. The receiver is a stiff silicon nitride platform coated with gold and a silica film of suitably chosen thickness. A laser (reflected off the receiver, see also e) and a position-sensitive detector (PSD) enable optical detection of emitter–receiver contact NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY DOI: 10.1038/NNANO.2016.17 formation with nanometre resolution. A sinusoidal electrical current (If,in = If,out), at f = 1 Hz, is supplied to the emitter’s resistor, resulting in Joule heating with amplitude Qjoule,2fa and frequency 2 Hz. This is partly conducted through the beams (Qcon,2f ) and partly radiated to the emitter (Qrad,2f). The emitter’s c Pt thermometer a Eucentric point 160 Ta 10-μm-thick temperature oscillations are quantified by measuring the third harmonic of the voltage (V3f) across the resistor. The receiver’s temperature oscillations are of goniometer Si beam measured by supplying a dc current (Idc,in = Idc,out) through the receiver’s resistor and by monitoring the voltage output at 2f (V2f ) across it. Ta is the ambient θy temperature. b, Schematic cross-section of the planar receiver region and the spherical silica emitter. The gold layer is ∼100 nm thick, and the thickness140 t of −1 the SiO2 film varies from 50 nm to 3 µm for different receiver devices. c, Scanning electronzmicroscope θ(SEM) image of the suspended platform and optical x y image (inset) of the spherical emitter. d, SEM images of the receiver show20-μm-tall ribbed beams andθz suspended regions. e, Optical image of the emitter and receiver 20-μm-thick Receiver 120 Si mesa during alignment. In this image the devices were laterally displaced to enable simultaneous visualization. Si beam d = 50 nm d = 100 nm d = 500 nm 6 Motivation: Near-Field TPV Device Space0charge The Center of Rotation Gonio Stage • x,y -rotation Emitter Photon Heat Emi$er ! TPV Cell or PV Cell TPV*Cell Cooling water Piezo Actuator • z-stage z Electrical0Output Micro Stage • z-rotation • x, y, z-stage y x Current Density (A/cm2) Electric&Power 0.03 FIGURE 4. SCEMATIC DIAGRAM OF EACH STAGE SETUP 1000 0.3 FOR NANO-SCALE PARALLEL GAP POSITION Dark 2000µm 500µm 36µm 10µm 0.02 0.01 0 -0.3 For realizing NF-TPV device, we -0.1 need 0.1 0.3 -0.01 ! source temperature to be as -0.02 high as possible -0.03 ! vacuum gap to be as small asVoltage possible (V) FIGURE 6. I-V CURVES FOR Si-PV CELL IN NEAR-FIELD AND PROPAGATING WAVE REGIMES ! surface area to be as wide as possible was only a small increase in the current density with decreasing gap from 2000 m through 500 m to 36 m since the view factor between the emitter surface area (5mm x 6mm) and the cell area (15mm x 18mm) is close to unity. Those results were also obtained in the regime of the conventional propagating radiation. Similar to the case of GaSb-TPV cell, the conversion Short-circuit current density Jsc (A/cm2) Waste&Heat&Energy& (Infrared&radia2on) 0.25 0.2 Emitter temperature 800 Emitter temperature (K) hole electron 600 block mounted on piezo-actuator system which was able to 0.15 positioning x-y-z- Jmicro-stages, while the400 emitter was sc mounted on 0.1 double axes gonio-stage controlled by a computer. Using the 0.05 gonio-stage, a parallel gap between200these surfaces was made over the surface area of emitter. The minimum 0 incremental motion of the piezo-actuator in the0direction of the 10 6 0 z-axis for controlling 8the gap was 440nm.2 (µm) gap between the both In order to make Distance the parallel surfaces,FIGURE a following procedure should be required using the 7. EMITTER TEMPERATURE AND SHORT gonio-stage and the piezo-actuator beforeINthe emitter was CIRCUIT CURRENT DENSITY NEARgroup, Tokyo Tech (AJTEC2011-44513) REGIME WHILE USING GaSb-TPV heated.K.InHanamura’s the first FIELD step, the emitter surface was rotated around the x-axis, which was fixed onCELL its surface. Just when the surface contacted with the electrode, some electric current can be conventional detected. The rotated angle wasif recorded. In the second propagating radiation the fill factor is kept at step, theconstant. emitter However, surface was rotated in the opposite direction the conversion efficiency does notangle change only thewith incident energy is enhanced up so tomuch madebecause on contact the radiation electrode again. Then, the half effect. in Asthe a result, energy which the is not of by the near-filed rotated angle secondthestep becomes first step 7 Proposed Device Schematics 8 Fabricated Device 9 Measurement of Near-Field Thermal Radiation (b) M. Lim, S.S. Lee, and B.J. Lee, Physical Review B 91, 195136, 2015. 10 Advantage of the Proposed Device Measured capacitance is related to the separation distance Cm = ✏ Alternatively, C = Thus, dm = L "Z Z L 0 WL dm dA ✏ = d(x) dx d(x) # Z L 0 W dx ✏ = ✏W d(x) Z L 0 dx d(x) 1 = davg According to Derjaguin approximation, hR,avg ⇥ (W L) = Z A hR {d(x)}dA Since hR is predicted to be proportional to 1/d when the vacuum gap width varies from 200 nm to 1200 nm, hR,avg a = L Z L 0 dx a +b= +b d(x) davg The average radiative heat transfer coefficient is nothing but the radiative heat transfer coefficient at the average gap distance. 11 Remaining Challenges ! Near-field enhancement of radiative heat transfer becomes significant when the vacuum gap distance between parallel plates is less than 200 nm. But maintaining such a small gap distance between parallel plates (with wide surface area) is extremely challenging. ! One of the most prominent applications of near-field radiation is a thermophotovoltaic (TPV) energy conversion, which requires planar geometry with wide surface area. ! We may also need to seek alternatives. For instance, we can modify surface conditions using optical metamaterials including graphene in order to further enhance the near-field thermal radiation at achievable vacuum gap distance. 12 Spectral Control of Near-Field Radiation Fig. 6. Contribution of graphene to the net heat transfer. Fig. 1. Schematic of the near-field thermal radiatio graphene separated by vacuum gap d (a) in three-dim coordinate. A monolayer of graphene is modelled as Fig. 5. Contour plot of S(β , ω ) with respect to the parallel wavevector component β normalized by plasma frequency (ω p = 2.90 × 1014 rad/s) of doped Si at 1019 cm−3 and 400 K. SPP dispersion curves are also overlaid. Source and receiver configurations for each case are listed in Table 1. to employ a monolayer of graphene with its chemical p Graphene, a two-dimensional (2-D) lattice of carb tal and electronic quality, draws enormous attention d electronic and photonic devices [14, 15]. Because plasm to near-infrared spectral region by modifying electron focus on the role of graphene on the near-field radiativ Fig. 7. Net heat transfer between graphene-coated Si plates at 1017 cm−3 with respe Lim, S.S. Lee, and B.J. Lee, Optics Express 21, 22173–22185, 2013. tiongap onM. near-field thermophotovoltaic devices [21, 22]. the vacuum width. gated the effect of graphene on the near-field heat 13 tran Graphene-Assisted NF-TPV System d Graphene r z Fig. 3. Contour of Sβ ,λ (β , λ ) in logarithmic scale: (a)-(c) d = 10 nm and NSi = 1 × 1020 cm−3 ; (d)-(f) d = 10 nm and NSi = 5 × 1020 cm−3 ; and (g)-(i) d = 50 nm and NSi = 1 × 1020 cm−3 . For simplicity, the parallel wavevector component β is normalized by bandgap wavelength (λg = 7.29 µ m). Surface plasmon dispersion curves are also overlaid. wever, the heat transfer enhancement is not as significant as in Fig. 3(c). M. Lim, S.M. Jin, S.S. Lee, and B.J. Lee, Optics Express 23, A240-A253, 2015. 14 Extending Graphene’s Effects to Longer Distances 1 Doped Si Source (1×1020 cm-3) 500 K . Graphene 0 d d td Dn Figure 4. Spectral photocurrent densityDgenerated in the TPV cell when interf r SiO2 with thickness of 10 nm (i.e., t nm): (a) d = 10 nm (b) d = 50 nm (c d = 10 p-doped InSb TPV cell 300 K r 200 nm. n-doped 2 ·· Graphene 1 z z M. Lim, S.S. Lee, and B.J. Lee, 8th International Symposium on Radiative Transfer, RAD-16, June 6-10, 2016 . Figure 5. Power output with respect to the vacuum gap width depending on t 15 HMM emitter is used from point of view of the effective medium theory. Figures 4(a) and 4(c) show the contour of function S(β , ω ), defined in Eq. (1), for cases of the HMM emitter and pain HMM-Assisted NF-TPV System (a) (b) Tungsten substrate SiO2 TPV cell Vacuum Receiver Type Ⅱ Hyperbolic Band Tungsten Type Ⅱ Hyperbolic Band 2N 2N-1 r z } Nth period dd dm Tungsten HMM Source SiO2 Tungsten SiO2 2 1 } 0 d 1st period p-region Lp Depletion region Ldp n-region Ln InAs (c) (d) W substrate Vacuum InAs Fig. 4. Contour plot of (a) S(β , ω ) and (b) W substrate Vacuum InAs S.M. Jin, M. Lim, S.S. Lee, and B.J. Lee, Optics Express 24, A635-A649, 2016. p-polarization exchange function ξ p (β , ω ) with 16 3rd International Workshop on Nano-Micro Thermal Radiation (NanoRad) (June 26-28 2017 at KAIST, South Korea) Co-Chairs: Bong Jae Lee, KAIST, South Korea Mathieu Francoeur, University of Utah, USA Long Shuai, Harbin Institute of Technology, China 17