Publication | Closed Access
Near-Field Radiative Nanothermal Imaging of Nonuniform Joule Heating in Narrow Metal Wires
42
Citations
40
References
2018
Year
Radiative Heat TransferEngineeringMicroscopyThermal RadiationOptical PropertiesNonuniform Joule HeatingInfrared Radiation ThermometerThermodynamicsThermal ConductionSpatial ResolutionNanophotonicsMaterials SciencePhysicsNanotechnologyInfrared TechnologyThermal TransportThermal ImagingThermal PhysicsRadiometryHeat TransferNanophysicsThermographyMaterials CharacterizationApplied PhysicsTemperature MeasurementNarrow Metal WiresNanofabricationThermal SensorThermal EngineeringHigh Spatial ResolutionInfrared Systems
Probing spatial variation of temperature at the nanoscale provides key information for exploring diverse areas of modern science and technology. Despite significant progress in the development of contact thermometers with high spatial resolution, one inherent disadvantage is that the quantitative analysis of temperature can be complicated by the direct thermal contact. On the other hand, noncontact infrared radiation thermometer is free from such contact-induced disturbance, but suffers from insufficient spatial resolution stemming from diffraction-limit in the micrometer range. Combining a home-built sensitive infrared microscope with a noncontact scattering probe, we detected fluctuating electromagnetic evanescent fields on locally heated material surface, and thereby mapped temperature distribution in subwavelength scales. We visualize nanoscale Joule heating on current-carrying metal wires and find localized "hot-spots" developing along sharp corners of bended wires in the temperature mapping. Simulation calculations give quantitative account of the nanoscale temperature distribution, definitely indicating that the observed effect is caused by the nonuniform energy dissipation due to the current-crowding effect. The equipment in this work is a near-field version of infrared radiation thermometer with a spatial resolution far below the detection wavelength (<100 nm, or λ/140) in which local temperature distribution of operating nanoscale devices can be noninvasively mapped with a temperature resolution ∼2 K at room-temperature.
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