emissivity.org Thermal radiative properties of materials

University of Utah — TIFT Lab (Thermal Innovations for FuTure)

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University of Utah — TIFT Lab (Thermal Innovations for FuTure)

Snapshot

Country United States
City Salt Lake City, UT
Tier Engineered emissivity (Tier III)
Primary ecosystem Engineered thermal radiative properties
Relevant unit Thermal Innovations for FuTure (TIFT) Lab — Department of Mechanical Engineering
Distinctive Explicit thrust: “emissivity of materials, photon transport inside materials”

Why it matters internationally

The TIFT Lab is noteworthy because it explicitly namesthermal radiative properties: emissivity of materials, photon transport inside materials” as one of its research thrusts. That direct wording is relatively rare on university lab pages, which makes it a particularly useful institution to have on a map of the emissivity research community.

Scope of activity

Relevant unit

Radiative properties measured / studied

Thermal radiative properties — emissivity of materials; photon transport inside materials.

Methodology

Research on thermal radiative properties with emissivity of materials and photon transport inside materials as explicit thrusts, linking micro-scale radiative transport to engineered material performance.

Application domains

Why Utah TIFT Lab is a reference pole

Most university laboratories that work on emissivity do so implicitly, inside a broader heat-transfer or materials program. The TIFT Lab’s decision to name emissivity of materials as a research thrust — together with photon transport inside materials — is the kind of framing choice that signals a genuine research program around the quantity itself. That makes it a clean, well-labeled node in the Tier III engineered-emissivity ecosystem.

External sources

Traceability

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).