| Literature DB >> 33866783 |
Hongchen Ma1, Liang Wang2, Shuliang Dou3, Haipeng Zhao1, Min Huang1, Zewen Xu4, Xinyuan Zhang1, Xiudong Xu1, Aiqin Zhang4, Huiyu Yue4, Ghulam Ali4, Caihua Zhang4,5, Wenying Zhou5, Yao Li3, Yaohui Zhan1,6, Cheng Huang4,6.
Abstract
Daytime radiative cooling has attracted considerable attention recently due to its tremendous potential for passively exploiting the coldness of the universe as clean and renewable energy. Many advanced materials with novel photonic micro/nanostructures have already been developed to enable highly efficient daytime radiative coolers, among which the flexible hierarchical porous coatings (HPCs) are a more distinguished category. However, it is still hard to precisely control the size distribution of the randomized pores within the HPCs, usually resulting in a deficient solar reflection at the near-infrared optical regime under diverse fabrication conditions of the coatings. We report here a three-phase (i.e., air pore-phase, microsphere-phase, and polymer-phase) self-assembled hybrid porous composite coating, which dramatically increases the average solar reflectance and yields remarkable temperature drops of ∼10 and ∼ 30 °C compared to the ambient circumstance and black paint, respectively, according to the rooftop measurements. Mie theory and Monte Carlo simulations reveal the origin of the low reflectivity of as-prepared two-phase porous HPCs, and the optical cooling improvement of the three-phase porous composite coatings is attributed to the newly generated interfaces possessing the high scattering efficiency between the hierarchical pores and silica microspheres hybridized with appropriate mass fractions. As a result, the hybrid porous composite approach enhances the whole performance of the coatings, which provides a promising alternative to the flexible daytime radiative cooler.Entities:
Keywords: Mie theory-based Monte Carlo simulation; composite radiative cooling; hierarchical porous coating; optical scattering interface; silica microsphere
Year: 2021 PMID: 33866783 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c02145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229