Fever is something we encounter every day. A steaming cup of coffee gradually cools, a laptop warms up during use, and sunlight heats the earth’s surface. But when examining heat at distances much smaller than the width of a human hair, heat can behave unexpectedly.
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University, in collaboration with collaborators at Stanford University and Purdue University, have demonstrated a powerful new way to control heat at the nanoscale. Their findings were; naturewe provide strong experimental evidence that heat transfer can be intentionally manipulated and significantly enhanced using specially designed metamaterials.
How heat moves across small gaps
This research focuses on a phenomenon known as near-field radiative heat transfer. When two objects are separated by an extremely short distance of just a few hundred nanometers, heat can be transferred between them much more efficiently than under normal conditions.
Thermal energy is effectively passed through narrow gaps through electromagnetic waves, rather than simply radiating outward. This process allows much more heat to flow from one object to another than would normally be expected.
Scientists have understood this effect for years, but experimentally demonstrating how to dramatically enhance it has remained a challenge.
Metamaterial improves heat transfer
To accomplish this, the researchers turned to metamaterials, artificial materials containing microscopic repeating structures designed to interact with energy in highly controlled ways.
“Unlike traditional materials, metamaterials are built with tiny repeating patterns that interact with energy in precise ways,” said Shen Sheng, a professor of mechanical engineering at Carnegie Mellon University and senior author of the study. “We patterned microscopic gold structures on a thin film and placed them face-to-face across nanoscale gaps. This increased heat transfer by up to four times compared to a similar setup without the metamaterial. This far exceeds predictions by conventional physics at long distances.”
The researchers’ experiments showed that the gold pattern structure significantly increased the amount of heat transferred across the gap, achieving heat transfer rates up to four times higher than comparable systems without the designed pattern.
The science behind the effect
This enhancement is not just the result of adding more routes for heat transfer.
“Rather than simply increasing the path of heat, the gold structure interacts with naturally occurring energy waves within the material known as surface phonon polaritons, creating a resonant effect,” said Zeshao Wang, a doctoral student in Professor Shen’s research group and co-lead author of the study. “These coupled vibrations allow energy to move more freely and efficiently across the gap.”
According to the researchers, this effect is caused by the cooperation between the microscopic structure and the material’s natural energy waves.
“It’s a collaborative effect,” Shen said. “Structure and materials amplify each other.”
Potential applications in electronics and energy
This discovery could lead to important practical applications. As electronic devices become smaller and more powerful, removing excess heat has become one of the most important engineering challenges.
Being able to direct and control heat more effectively could lead to improvements in how computer chips and other high-performance electronic systems are cooled.
This discovery could also be useful in energy technology. Systems known as thermophotovoltaics generate electricity from heat by converting thermal radiation into usable electricity. Increasing the efficiency of thermal radiation transfer could help make these technologies more feasible.
Additionally, applications involving infrared sensing may benefit from stronger and more precisely controlled thermal signals. Potential applications range from environmental monitoring to national security.
A step towards thermal engineering
Although the experiments were conducted under carefully controlled laboratory conditions and are still limited to nanoscale systems, this work represents an important advance from theoretical prediction to real-world demonstration.
“If heat can be manipulated with the same precision as electricity and light, it could open the door to a new class of technologies that not only withstand heat but also harness it,” Shen said.
This research was supported by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency, the National Science Foundation, and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research. Sheng Shen and Shanhui Fan are corresponding authors. Zexiao Wang, Renwen Yu, and Hakan Salihoglu also contributed to this work.

