Publication | Closed Access
Experimental observation of extremely weak optical scattering from an interlocking carbon nanotube array
55
Citations
19
References
2011
Year
Wavelength-independent Optical ReflectionShort Wavelength OpticOptical MaterialsEngineeringWave OpticCarbon NanotechnologyLight Scattering SpectroscopyOptical CharacterizationExperimental ObservationOptical PropertiesNanometrologyOptical SpectroscopyCarbon NanotubesNanophotonicsPhotonicsPhysicsPhotonic MaterialsUltralow ReflectanceWeak Optical ScatteringCarbon Nanotube ArrayNatural SciencesSpectroscopyApplied PhysicsWave ScatteringLight ScatteringBroad Infrared WavelengthNanotubes
We experimentally demonstrate a nearly wavelength-independent optical reflection from an extremely rough carbon nanotube sample. The sample is made of a vertically aligned nanotube array, is a super dark material, and exhibits a near-perfect blackbody emission at T=450 K-600 K. No other material exhibits such optical properties, i.e., ultralow reflectance accompanied by a lack of wavelength scaling behavior. This observation is a result of the lowest ever measured reflectance (R=0.0003) of the sample over a broad infrared wavelength of 3 μm < λ < 13 μm. This discovery may be attributed to the unique interlocking surface of the nanotube array, consisting of both a global, large scale and a short-range randomness.
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