Litcius/Paper detail

Hierarchically Hollow Microfibers as a Scalable and Effective Thermal Insulating Cooler for Buildings

Hongmei Zhong, Yanan Li, Peng Zhang, Shouwei Gao, Bing‐Ying Liu, Yang Wang, Ting Meng, Yongsen Zhou, Huwang Hou, Chaohua Xue, Yang Zhao, Zuankai Wang

2021ACS Nano261 citationsDOI

Abstract

Daytime passive radiative cooling is a promising electricity-free pathway for cooling terrestrial buildings. Current research interest in this cooling strategy mainly lies in tailoring the optical spectra of materials for strong thermal emission and high solar reflection. However, environmental heat gain poses a crucial challenge to building cooling at subambient temperatures. Herein, we devise a scalable thermal insulating cooler (TIC) consisting of hierarchically hollow microfibers as the building envelope that simultaneously achieves passive daytime radiative cooling and thermal insulation to reduce environmental heat gain. The TIC demonstrates efficient solar reflection (94%) and long-wave infrared emission (94%), yielding a temperature drop of about 9 °C under sunlight of 900 W/m2. Notably, the thermal conductivity of the TIC is lower than that of air, thus preventing heat flow from external environments to indoor space in the summer, an additional benefit that does not sacrifice the radiative cooling performance. A building energy simulation shows that 48.5% of cooling energy could be saved if the TIC is widely deployed in China.

Topics & Concepts

Passive coolingRadiative coolingMaterials scienceThermal insulationBuilding envelopeRadiative transferThermalActive coolingWaste heatEnvironmental scienceThermal conductivityNuclear engineeringSolar gainOptoelectronicsEngineering physicsComposite materialOpticsMechanical engineeringMeteorologyWater coolingHeat exchangerPhysicsEngineeringLayer (electronics)Thermal Radiation and Cooling TechnologiesUrban Heat Island MitigationBuilding Energy and Comfort Optimization