TY - JOUR
T1 - Colloidal Photonic Assemblies for Colorful Radiative Cooling
AU - Kim, Hyeon Ho
AU - Im, Eunji
AU - Lee, Seungwoo
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported from the Samsung Research Funding & Incubation Center for Future Technology of Samsung Electronics (project number SRFC-MA1801-04). KU-KIST school project supported graduate student scholarship for H.H.K. The authors also thank Ji-Hyeok Huh and Kwangjin Kim for their helpful assistance of spectroscopic characterizations and effective medium theoretical analyses.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2020/6/16
Y1 - 2020/6/16
N2 - Radiative cooling has proven to be a powerful strategy for sustainable thermal management. Nanophotonic structures enabling broadband reflection lead to minimization of sunlight absorption, which has brought nighttime-limited radiative cooling into daytime applications. However, this broadband reflection strategy in turn restricts the accessible colorization of radiative coolers to white or neutral, consequently hindering their practical applications, particularly for aesthetic purposes. With a few exceptions, selective absorption at a specific visible wavelength has been the most prevalent paradigm for colorization of radiative coolers. However, this absorption-based colorization inevitably makes the radiative cooler prone to heating, thus decreasing the cooling efficiency. Here, we demonstrate an undiscovered usage of opals for advancing color-preserved daytime radiative coolers. Opals, which have served mainly as Bragg reflective color pigments thus far, can be considered an effective homogeneous medium in the mid-infrared region. Thus, opals can also be envisioned as reflectively colorful metamaterials capable of radiative cooling even under the direct summer sun. Together with the soft fluidity of colloidal suspensions, opals can serve as platforms for easy-to-craft, large-scale, and colorful radiative coolers with minimal solar absorption.
AB - Radiative cooling has proven to be a powerful strategy for sustainable thermal management. Nanophotonic structures enabling broadband reflection lead to minimization of sunlight absorption, which has brought nighttime-limited radiative cooling into daytime applications. However, this broadband reflection strategy in turn restricts the accessible colorization of radiative coolers to white or neutral, consequently hindering their practical applications, particularly for aesthetic purposes. With a few exceptions, selective absorption at a specific visible wavelength has been the most prevalent paradigm for colorization of radiative coolers. However, this absorption-based colorization inevitably makes the radiative cooler prone to heating, thus decreasing the cooling efficiency. Here, we demonstrate an undiscovered usage of opals for advancing color-preserved daytime radiative coolers. Opals, which have served mainly as Bragg reflective color pigments thus far, can be considered an effective homogeneous medium in the mid-infrared region. Thus, opals can also be envisioned as reflectively colorful metamaterials capable of radiative cooling even under the direct summer sun. Together with the soft fluidity of colloidal suspensions, opals can serve as platforms for easy-to-craft, large-scale, and colorful radiative coolers with minimal solar absorption.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85086523691&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.langmuir.0c00051
DO - 10.1021/acs.langmuir.0c00051
M3 - Article
C2 - 32370514
AN - SCOPUS:85086523691
SN - 0743-7463
VL - 36
SP - 6589
EP - 6596
JO - Langmuir
JF - Langmuir
IS - 23
ER -