| Literature DB >> 34353954 |
Shaoning Zeng1, Sijie Pian2, Minyu Su1, Zhuning Wang2, Maoqi Wu1,3, Xinhang Liu2, Mingyue Chen3, Yuanzhuo Xiang1, Jiawei Wu1, Manni Zhang1, Qingqing Cen2, Yuwei Tang2, Xianheng Zhou2, Zhiheng Huang1, Rui Wang1, Alitenai Tunuhe1, Xiyu Sun3, Zhigang Xia4, Mingwei Tian5, Min Chen6, Xiao Ma7, Lvyun Yang1, Jun Zhou1, Huamin Zhou8, Qing Yang2, Xin Li7, Yaoguang Ma9, Guangming Tao10.
Abstract
Incorporating passive radiative cooling structures into personal thermal management technologies could effectively defend humans against intensifying global climate change. We show that large-scale woven metafabrics can provide high emissivity (94.5%) in the atmospheric window and high reflectivity (92.4%) in the solar spectrum because of the hierarchical-morphology design of the randomly dispersed scatterers throughout the metafabric. Through scalable industrial textile manufacturing routes, our metafabrics exhibit desirable mechanical strength, waterproofness, and breathability for commercial clothing while maintaining efficient radiative cooling ability. Practical application tests demonstrated that a human body covered by our metafabric could be cooled ~4.8°C lower than one covered by commercial cotton fabric. The cost-effectiveness and high performance of our metafabrics present substantial advantages for intelligent garments, smart textiles, and passive radiative cooling applications.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34353954 DOI: 10.1126/science.abi5484
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728