Litcius/Paper detail

Crack‐Resistant and Self‐Healable Passive Radiative Cooling Silicone Compounds

Cong Guo, Chuanlong Li, Zeshuang Qiao, Chuxin Lei, Zhengyu Ju, Yongzheng Zhang, Qin Zhang, Qiang Fu, Kai Wu

2025Advanced Materials18 citationsDOI

Abstract

Crack damage and expansion are prevalent issues in outdoor materials, which absorb or transmit sunlight to damaged areas, substantially impairing the functionality of passive radiative cooling systems. Herein, a silicone/dielectric radiative cooling compound is introduced that is both self-healing and crack-resistant, developed through the synthesis of a dynamic and crack-resistant polymer/dielectric hydrogen bond network. This network incorporates boron nitride dielectrics, which serve as sunlight scatterers and hydrogen bond acceptors, with customized silicone polymer featuring high atmospheric window emissive chain segments and UV-vis-NIR transparent hydrogen bond moieties. When cracks form, the polymer's chain mobility allows the hydrogen bond moieties in boron nitride and silicone to re-associate, realizing self-healing of cracks from micrometers to millimeters wide and restoring cooling performance to ≈100%. The combination of rigid boron nitride and sacrificial hydrogen bonds in polymer also enhances the materials' fracture energy to 865%, effectively preventing further crack propagation under stress through autonomous crack blunting and deflection. These remarkable characteristics make this radiative cooling compound highly suited for increasingly complex, dynamic, and prolonged outdoor application environments.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceRadiative coolingSiliconeSelf-healingComposite materialForensic engineeringEngineeringMeteorologyAlternative medicineMedicinePathologyPhysicsThermal Radiation and Cooling TechnologiesRadiative Heat Transfer StudiesBuilding Energy and Comfort Optimization