Bauxite and silica particles are candidate materials for solar thermal energy storage at high temperatures. The temperature-dependent emittance of packed beds with bauxite and silica particles was measured using a newly upgraded emissometer at wavelengths 2 μm ≤ λ ≤ 16 μm and temperatures up to ~730 K. The room-temperature emittance was obtained from the measured directional-hemispherical reflectance. A fused silica disc was used to test the emissometer by comparing the measured spectral emittance with the calculated emittance from a fitted Lorentz oscillator model. For the polycrystalline silica particles and the fused silica disc, the measured emittance increases with temperature in the mid-infrared region. The underlying mechanism is interpreted as the temperature-dependent damping coefficient in the Lorentz oscillator model. Two types of bauxite particles with different compositions and sizes were investigated. For λ > 10 μm, the measured emittance at elevated temperatures is higher than that at room temperature. In the region 2 μm < λ < 6 μm, the temperature dependence varies for different types of particles. The total emittance of bauxite particle beds was calculated by spectral integration using Planck's distribution at the prescribed temperature. The calculated total emittance is between 0.89 and 0.96, but it does not change monotonically with temperature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]