No Arabic abstract
It is well established that nearly all high-quality (Q) Fano-like resonances in terahertz (THz) metasurfaces broaden as asymmetry increases, resulting in a decline of Q-factor and an increase in the resonance intensity. Therefore, in order to determine the optimal design for applications in THz sensing, a Figure of Merit (FoM) is required. Previous studies have identified the asymmetry regimes at which the peak FoM occurs for various, specific unit cell geometries. However to date, there is no systematic comparison of the resulting FoMs for common and novel geometries. Here, a THz planar metafilm featuring split ring resonators with four distributed capacitive gaps is investigated to compare three unique methods of implementing asymmetry: (1) adjacent L-bracket translation, (2) capacitive gap translation and (3) increasing gap width. The results obtained find that by translating two gaps and increasing the bottom gap width of the unit cell, the high-Q Fano-like resonances are $6 times$ higher than the FoM for the fundamental dipole mode. This work further informs the design process for THz metasurfaces and as such will help to define their applications in photonics and sensing.
Radiative cooling is a passive cooling technology by reflecting sunlight and emitting radiation in the atmospheric sky window. Although highly desired, full daytime sub-ambient radiative cooling in commercial-like single-layer particle-matrix paints is yet to be achieved. In this work, we have demonstrated full daytime sub-ambient radiative cooling in CaCO3-acrylic paint by adopting large bandgap fillers, a high particle concentration and a broad size distribution. Our paint shows the highest solar reflectance of 95.5% among paints and a high sky-window emissivity of 0.94. Field tests show cooling power exceeding 37 W/m2 and lower surface temperature more than 1.7C below ambient at noon. A figure of merit RC is proposed to compare the cooling performance under different weather conditions. The RC of our cooling paint is 0.62, among the best radiative cooling performance while offering unprecedented benefits of the convenient paint form, low cost, and the compatibility with commercial paint fabrication process.
The Fano resonance is a widespread wave scattering phenomenon associated with a peculiar asymmetric and ultra-sharp line shape, which has found applications in a large variety of prominent optical devices. While its substantial sensitivity to geometrical and environmental changes makes it the cornerstone of efficient sensors, it also renders the practical realization of Fano-based systems extremely challenging. Here, we introduce the concept of topological Fano resonance, whose ultra-sharp asymmetric line shape is guaranteed by design and protected against geometrical imperfections, yet remaining sensitive to external parameters. We report the experimental observation of such resonances in an acoustic system, and demonstrate their inherent robustness to geometrical disorder. Such topologically-protected Fano resonances, which can also be found in microwave, optical and plasmonic systems, open up exciting frontiers for the generation of various reliable wave-based devices including low-threshold lasers, perfect absorbers, ultrafast switches or modulators, and highly accurate interferometers, by circumventing the performance degradations caused by inadvertent fabrication flaws.
Half-Heusler alloys (MgAgSb structure) are promising thermoelectric materials. RNiSn half-Heusler phases (R=Hf, Zr, Ti) are the most studied in view of their thermal stability. The highest dimensionless figure of merit (ZT) obtained is ~1 in the temperature range ~450-900oC, primarily achieved in nanostructured alloys. Through proper annealing, ZT~1.2 has been obtained in a previous ZT~1 n-type (Hf,Zr)NiSn phase without the nanostructure. There is an appreciable increase in the power factor, decrease in charge carrier density, and increase in carrier mobility. The findings are attributed to the improvement of structural order. Present approach may be applied to optimize the functional properties of Heusler-type alloys.
This paper has been withdrawn to allow publication elsewhere.
The design of uranium-based thermoelectric materials presents a novel and intriguing strategy for directly converting nuclear heat into electrical power. Using high-level first-principles approach combined with accurate solution of Boltzmann transport equation, we demonstrate that a giant n-type power factor of 13.8 mW/mK^2 and a peak ZT value of 2.2 can be realized in the heavy-fermion UN2 compound at 700 K. Such promising thermoelectric performance arises from the large degeneracy (Nv=14) of heavy conduction band coupled with weak electron-phonon interactions, which is in principle governed by the strong Coulomb correlation among the partially filled U-5f electrons in the face-centered cubic structure. Collectively, our theoretical work suggests that the energetic UN2 is an excellent alternative to efficient radioisotope power conversion, which also uncovers an underexplored area for thermoelectric research.