RESUMO
The advent of nanophotonics enables the regulation of thermal emission in the momentum domain as well as in the frequency domain. However, earlier attempts to steer thermal emission in a certain direction were restricted to a narrow spectrum or specific polarization, and thus their average (8-14 µm) emissivity (εav) and angular selectivity were nominal. Therefore, the practical uses of directional thermal emitters have remained unclarified. Here, we report broadband, polarization-irrelevant, amplified directional thermal emission from hollow microcavities covered with deep-subwavelength-thickness oxide shells. A hexagonal array of SiO2/AlOX (100/100 nm) hollow microcavities designed by Bayesian optimization exhibited εav values of 0.51-0.62 at 60°-75° and 0.29-0.32 at 5°-20°, yielding a parabolic antenna-shaped distribution. The angular selectivity peaked at 8, 9.1, 10.9, and 12 µm, which were identified as the epsilon-near-zero (via Berreman modes) and maximum-negative-permittivity (via photon-tunneling modes) wavelengths of SiO2 and AlOX, respectively, thus supporting phonon-polariton resonance mediated broadband side emission. As proof-of-concept experiments, we demonstrated that these exceptional epsilon-based microcavities could provide thermal comfort to users and practical cooling performance to optoelectronic devices.