Abstract
This work presents a novel study of radiative heat transfer between closely separated plates based on an extension of Planck’s spectrum of thermal radiations to systems with a steady heat flux. This extension together with electromagnetic wave theory is chosen specifically to avoid the commonly used so-called fluctuation dissipation theory, which is also limited to equilibrium systems. The spectrum of thermal radiation with a heat flux is described by the introduction of an analog of a chemical potential, which creates a bias toward the direction of heat transfer. This is the first comprehensive study of radiative heat transfer based on the generalization of Planck’s spectrum for systems with a heat flux, which eliminates contradictions arising when a heat flux is described in terms of the laws limited to equilibrium systems. The total heat flux is split into fluxes carried by waves with different frequencies, directions of propagation, and polarizations. This simplifies the analysis because due to the stochastic independence, the energy fluxes of such waves are additive, and this also reveals that the heat carrying capacity of radiation with the parallel polarization is significantly higher than that of the perpendicularly polarized radiation. This suggests that the rate of radiative heat transfer may be noticeably increased by the control of the polarization of thermal radiation.
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