Researchers Found Near-infrared Reflective Blending Coatings with Better Optical and Cooling Performance
Updatetime:2021-10-11From:
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Chinese researchers recently found that a near-infrared reflective Blending Coatings had better optical and cooling performance, thereby reducing the absorbed energy of pavement in permafrost regions and other special regions.
Researchers from Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources of Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) took the TiO2 and CuO blending coating as an example, and focused on investigating their optical and cooling performances.
They first adopted three types of functional reflective particles, TiO2 nanoparticles (NPs), CuO NPs and CuO micro-particles (MPs) as pigments to obtain 12 types of TiO2 and CuO blending coatings, then they measured and compared the spectral reflectances of these blending coatings, and finally selected 8 types of these blending coatings to study their cooling performances.
They painted these 8 selected blending coating to the asphalt blocks and then monitored the surface temperature.
Results show that the spectral reflectance for the TIO2 NPs and CuO NPs blending coating increases slightly while that for TiO2 NPs and CuO MPs increases largely with the increase of TiO2 NPs.
Besides, the spectral reflectance of the CuO NPs and TiO2 NPs blending coating is higher than that of the CuO MPs and TiO2 NPs blending coating when the TiO2 NPs mass percentage is lower than 15.88%.
Results also indicate that the cooling performances of these selected near-infrared reflective blending coatings are different under the summer of autumn meteorological condition.
This study can provide a reference and insight to the design and fabricating of near-infrared reflective blending coating, thereby reducing the undesired pavement absorbed energy.
This study has been published in Solar Energy in an article entitled Experimental study of optical and cooling performances of CuO and TiO2 near-infrared reflective blending coatings.
Contact:
ZHANG Mingyi
E-mail: myzhang@lzb.ac.cn
State Key Laboratory of Frozen Soil Engineering, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou, China.
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