SOLAR DAILY
Radiative cooler that cools down even under sunlight
by Staff Writers
Pohang, South Korea (SPX) Oct 21, 2020

Above: Photograph of fabricated radiative cooler (left). Images of the cooler captured from top (right) and cross-section (right) using the scanning electron microscope (SEM). Below: Graph of temperature measured over three days. Radiative cooler (black line) is observed to have lower temperature than its ambient temperature (green line).

Now that autumn is upon us, there is a large temperature gap between day and night. This is due to the temperature inversion caused by radiative cooling on the Earth's surface. Heat from the sun during the day causes its temperature to rise and when the sun sets during the night, its temperature cools down. Recently, a joint research team from POSTECH and Korea University has demonstrated a daytime radiative cooling effect which exhibits lower temperatures than its surroundings even during the day.

Professor Junsuk Rho and Ph.D. candidate Dasol Lee of departments of mechanical engineering and chemical engineering and Professor Jin Kon Kim and Ph.D. candidate Myeongcheol Go in the Department of Chemical Engineering at POSTECH have conducted a joint study with Professor Heon Lee of Materials Science Engineering at Korea University to successfully realized an energy-free radiative cooling technology using silica-coated porous anodic aluminum oxide. The study was published in the latest online edition of Nano Energy, an international journal in the energy sector.

With growing interest in energy consumption, such as environmental pollution and limitations in using fossil fuels, attempts to lower the temperature without consuming energy continue. Radiative cooling is an example of structures installed on windows or walls to reduce the building temperature by reflecting sunlight or by absorbing and radiating far-infrared light. Radiative cooling is a technology that allows objects to receive less energy from the sun and lower temperatures by emitting radiative heat.

Unlike conventional cooling systems, radiative cooling is difficult to apply to large areas, although it has the advantage of significantly reducing energy consumption like electricity. Research to overcome this issue is being actively carried out around the world but it is still challenging to commercialize the technology.

To this, the joint research team found a very simple solution. Just by coating the porous anodic aluminum with a thin film of silica, it has been confirmed that there is a cooling effect that exhibits a lower temperature than the surroundings even under direct sunlight.

Experiments have confirmed that an optimized structure can have a reflectivity of 86% in the solar spectral region and a high emissivity of 96% in the atmospheric window (8-13 um). In addition, the radiative cooling material - produced in centimeters - showed a cooling efficiency of up to 6.1 C during the day when the sunlight was strong.

"This newly developed radiative cooling material can be easily produced," explained POSTECH Professor Junsuk Rho. He added optimistically, "It will help solve environmental problems if applied to heating and cooling systems since it can be readily applied to large areas."

Research paper


Related Links
Pohang University Of Science and Technology
All About Solar Energy at SolarDaily.com

SOLAR DAILY
Studying new solar tracking strategies to maximize electric production
Cordoba, Spain (SPX) Oct 20, 2020
From making a small calculator work to generating energy to produce the entire output of an important brewery, solar energy has been undergoing significant growth in recent years, taking the place of nonrenewable energy resources that negatively affect the environment. In addition to producing clean energy, solar plants can be adapted to different sizes and allow for self-consumption. Over the last few years, their profitability as compared to other kinds of energy has become increasingly greater ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

SOLAR DAILY
Artificial cyanobacterial biofilm can sustain green ethylene production for over a month

Sludge-powered bacteria generate more electricity, faster

Hungary chlorine gas leak injures 28 at refinery

Lighting the path to recycling carbon dioxide

SOLAR DAILY
A global collaboration to move artificial intelligence principles to practice

NTU Singapore scientists develop 'mini-brains' to help robots recognize pain and to self-repair

Robot swarms follow instructions to create art

ESA's force-feedback rover controlled from a nation away

SOLAR DAILY
California offshore winds show promise as power source

Offshore wind power now so cheap it could pay money back to consumers

SOLAR DAILY
Contractors or employees? Uber drivers split ahead of California vote

Communications breakdown? Tesla turns away from media

SUVs targeted in new French 'weight tax'

Uber and Lyft argue in California court over status of drivers

SOLAR DAILY
A new approach boosts lithium-ion battery efficiency and puts out fires, too

LiU researchers first to develop an organic battery

How impurities enhance a thermoelectric material at the atomic level

UNLV and University of Rochester physicists observe room-temperature superconductivity

SOLAR DAILY
Russian scientists suggested a transfer to safe nuclear energy

Framatome showcases nuclear technologies at China's first international nuclear exhibition since COVID-19

Framatome and General Atomics announce collaboration to develop fast modular reactor

Close-up monitoring of radioactive processes

SOLAR DAILY
Unprecedented energy use since 1950 has transformed humanity's geologic footprint

A renewable solution to keep cool in a warming world

Real-time data show COVID-19's massive impact on global emissions

ECB's Lagarde urges more green finance

SOLAR DAILY
Laser technology measures biomass in world's largest trees

Unexpectedly large number of trees populate the Western Sahara and the Sahel

Droughts are threatening global wetlands: new study

Ecuadoran indigenous activist recognized by Time for fighting for her jungle