Litcius/Paper detail

Iridium‐Based Selective Emitters for Thermophotovoltaic Applications

Gnanavel Vaidhyanathan Krishnamurthy, Manohar Chirumamilla, Tobias Krekeler, Martin Ritter, Ragle Raudsepp, Mauricio Schieda, Thomas Klassen, Kjeld Pedersen, Alexander Yu. Petrov, Manfred Eich, M. Störmer

2023Advanced Materials20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The long‐term operation of refractory‐metal‐based metamaterials is crucial for applications such as thermophotovoltaics. The metamaterials based on refractory metals like W, Mo, Ta, Nb, and Re fail primarily by oxidation. Here, the use of the noble metal Ir is proposed, which is stable to oxidation and has optical properties comparable to gold. The thermal endurance of Ir in a 3‐layer‐system, consisting of HfO 2 /Ir/HfO 2 , by performing annealing experiments up to 1240 °C in a pressure range from 2 × 10 −6 mbar to 1 bar, is demonstrated. The Ir layer shows no oxidation in a vacuum and inert gas atmosphere. At temperatures above 1100 °C, the Ir layer starts to agglomerate due to the degradation of the confining HfO 2 layers. An in situ X‐ray diffraction experimental comparison between 1D multilayered Ir/HfO 2 and W/HfO 2 selective emitters annealed at 1000 °C, 2 × 10 −6 mbar, over 100 h, confirms oxidation stability of Ir while W multilayers gradually disappear. The results of this work show that W‐based metamaterials are not long‐term stable even at 1000 °C. However, the oxidation resistance of Ir can be leveraged for refractory plasmonic metamaterials, such as selective emitters in thermophotovoltaic systems with strong suppression of long wavelength radiation.

Topics & Concepts

ThermophotovoltaicMaterials scienceIridiumRefractory metalsAnnealing (glass)InfraredThermal oxidationPlasmonInert gasOptoelectronicsNanotechnologyLayer (electronics)OpticsComposite materialMetallurgyCommon emitterChemistryCatalysisBiochemistryPhysicsThermal Radiation and Cooling TechnologiesOptical properties and cooling technologies in crystalline materialsAtmospheric aerosols and clouds