| Country | France |
| City | Nantes |
| Tier | Extended (Tier II) |
| Primary ecosystem | High-temperature radiative properties — architectured ceramics |
| Relevant activity | LTeN — high-temperature radiative properties of architectured ceramics |
| Publicly linked people | Léo Gaillard |
| Thematic focus | Emissivity as a designable property of structured materials |
LTeN is a smaller but clearly active French node whose importance lies in thematic modernity. Architectured ceramics and related structured materials are exactly the types of systems for which emissivity can no longer be treated as a fixed, scalar background parameter. Instead it becomes a designable property, linked to porosity, geometry, scale hierarchy, and spectral response. Laboratories like LTeN carry emissivity work into the domain of materials architecture and functional microstructure, where the problem becomes not only measurement but interpretation and design.
High-temperature emissivity of architectured ceramics — with explicit attention to the geometric and microstructural factors that control it.
Once a material is designed rather than merely sampled, the emissivity measurement has to cope with the full heterogeneity of its architecture — porosity gradients, surface texture, unit-cell geometry. LTeN is one of the laboratories bringing this viewpoint into high-temperature measurement, which makes it a natural bridge between the classical emissivity community and the rapidly growing engineered-emissivity community represented in Tier III.
Every claim in this profile traces to the external sources listed above. Profile follows the research-map methodology. Last verified: 2026-04 (directory revision 2026-06-11).