Description
Daytime radiative cooling has recently become an attractive passive approach to address the global energy demand associated with modern technologies, currently accounting for about 15 % of the worldwide energy consumption. By engineering surface properties to maximise the natural blackbody emission to radiate thermal energy in the spectral transparency window of the atmosphere (8 – 13 μm), it has been shown that thermal radiation can be transferred to outer space, resulting in surface cooling, without an external electrical input. One technique used is based on surface phonon-polaritons, i.e., thermally excited surface waves in polar dielectric materials which can be outcoupled into free space. Here, we theoretically investigate new surface morphologies in the form of silica micro-sphere and micro-shell photonic crystals (PCs) using rigorous coupled-wave analysis to achieve cooling of over 73 K below-ambient temperature. Additionally, the effect of impurities in silica is explored by simulating soda-lime glass micro-shells, which in turn, exhibit radiative cooling of 61 K below-ambient temperature.
| Date made available | 21 May 2021 |
|---|---|
| Publisher | The Optical Society |
Research output
- 1 Article
-
Simulations of micro-sphere/shell 2D silica photonic crystals for radiative cooling
Whitworth, G. L., Jaramillo-Fernandez, J., Pariente, J. A., Garcia, P. D., Blanco, A., Lopez, C. & Sotomayor-Torres, C. M., 24 May 2021, In: Optics express. 29, 11, p. 16857-16866 10 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Research › peer-review
Open Access22 Link opens in a new tab Citations (Scopus)
Cite this
- DataSetCite
- Short
- Compact