Radiant
heating, as a significant thermal management technique,
is best known for its high thermal effect, media-free operation, good
penetration, and compatibility for different heated shapes. To promote
sustainable development in this area, developing advanced infrared
radiation material is in high demand. In this work, a lightweight,
flexible dual-emitter infrared electrothermal material, graphene glass
fiber (GGF), is developed by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method,
with both graphene and glass fiber as the radiation elements. Large-area
GGF fabric (GGFF) exhibits wavelength-independent high infrared emissivity
(0.92) and thermal radiation efficiency (79.4%), as well as ultrafast
electrothermal response (190.7 °C s–1 at 9.30
W cm–2) and uniform heating temperature. The superior
radiant heating capability of GGFF to traditional alloy heating wires
can achieve 33.3% energy saving. GGF can promote the development of
efficient and energy-saving heat management technology.