Journalpaper

Which factor determines the optical losses in refractory tungsten thin films at high temperatures?

Abstract

Refractory tungsten (W) plays an important role in high temperature photonic/plasmonic applications. Previously room temperature bulk single/poly-crystalline optical constants were extensively used to calculate the optical properties of W nanostructures at high temperatures. This might lead to a significant deviation between the predicted and measured optical properties due to the exclusion of electron–phonon interaction, as well as grain-boundary and surface-scattering. Herein, we show experimentally, how film thickness and temperature affects the optical losses in W. A drastic increase in the effective electron collision frequency is observed with decreasing the film thickness down to 5 nm, due to the grain-boundary and surface-scattering mechanisms. At sufficiently high temperatures (greater than 200 °C for W), the electron–phonon interaction eventually becomes the dominant mechanism, linearly increasing collision frequency with temperature, and it is independent of the geometry of the thin film structure. The impact of thickness and temperature-dependent optical properties of W is showcased with a hyperbolic 1D metamaterial structure acting as a thermophotovoltaic emitter. This work opens new directions in accurate prediction of the optical properties of nanostructures and design of efficient devices in various applications, such as aerospace, energy-efficient lighting, radiative cooling and energy harvesting, by incorporating thickness and temperature-dependent optical constants.
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