A.W. Kleinsasser, T.N. Jackson, et al.
IEEE T-ED
A material has been developed which allows a new approach to be made to the conversion of solar energy to heat. It consists of a dense array of metal whiskers grown with spacings of a few wavelengths of visible light. The material selected has low emissivity, and achieves significant optical absorption by trapping the light by a geometric maze effect. We have deomonstrated that absorption of normal incidence light is greater than 98% from 0.5 to 40-μm wavelengths, and hemispherical emissivity at 550°C can be made less than 0.26. Since surfaces can be made of a single refractory element, such as W, high-temperature solar conversion (550°C) should be maintained with good surface stability.
A.W. Kleinsasser, T.N. Jackson, et al.
IEEE T-ED
J.F. Ziegler, T.H. Zabel, et al.
Physical Review Letters
J.F. Ziegler, W.K. Chu, et al.
Applied Physics Letters
Alan C. Warren, J. Woodall, et al.
Physical Review B