A radiative cooling structural material
Abstrak
A stronger, cooler wood One good way to reduce the amount of cooling a building needs is to make sure it reflects away infrared radiation. Passive radiative cooling materials are engineered to do this extremely well. Li et al. engineered a wood through delignification and re-pressing to create a mechanically strong material that also cools passively. They modeled the cooling savings of their wood for 16 different U.S. cities, which suggested savings between 20 and 50%. Cooling wood would be of particular value in hot and dry climates. Science, this issue p. 760 A process of delignification and reapplication of pressure creates a strong wood-based passive radiative cooling material. Reducing human reliance on energy-inefficient cooling methods such as air conditioning would have a large impact on the global energy landscape. By a process of complete delignification and densification of wood, we developed a structural material with a mechanical strength of 404.3 megapascals, more than eight times that of natural wood. The cellulose nanofibers in our engineered material backscatter solar radiation and emit strongly in mid-infrared wavelengths, resulting in continuous subambient cooling during both day and night. We model the potential impact of our cooling wood and find energy savings between 20 and 60%, which is most pronounced in hot and dry climates.
Topik & Kata Kunci
Penulis (19)
Tian Li
Yao Zhai
Shuaiming He
Wentao Gan
Zhiyuan Wei
Mohammad Heidarinejad
Daniel A. Dalgo
Ruiyu Mi
Xinpeng Zhao
Jianwei Song
J. Dai
Chaoji Chen
Ablimit Aili
Azhar Vellore
A. Martini
Ronggui Yang
J. Srebric
Xiaobo Yin
Liangbing Hu
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2019
- Bahasa
- en
- Total Sitasi
- 1298×
- Sumber Database
- Semantic Scholar
- DOI
- 10.1126/science.aau9101
- Akses
- Open Access ✓