Posted on 07/13/2020 6:01:10 AM PDT by Red Badger
Under noontime sunlight, superwhite paints (labeled EL1 and EL3) developed by the researchers remain significantly cooler than traditional white paints (right corner, labeled EL2), which could lead to higher energy savings in buildings. Credit: Jyotirmoy Mandal
A research team led by UCLA materials scientists has demonstrated ways to make super white paint that reflects as much as 98% of incoming heat from the sun. The advance shows practical pathways for designing paints that, if used on rooftops and other parts of a building, could significantly reduce cooling costs, beyond what standard white 'cool-roof' paints can achieve.
The findings, published online in Joule, are a major and practical step towards keeping buildings cooler by passive daytime radiative coolinga spontaneous process in which a surface reflects sunlight and radiates heat into space, cooling down to potentially sub-ambient temperatures. This can lower indoor temperatures and help cut down on air conditioner use and associated carbon dioxide emissions.
"When you wear a white T-shirt on a hot sunny day, you feel cooler than if you wore one that's darker in colorthat's because the white shirt reflects more sunlight and it's the same concept for buildings," said Aaswath Raman, an assistant professor of materials science and engineering at UCLA Samueli School of Engineering, and the principal investigator on the study. "A roof painted white will be cooler inside than one in a darker shade. But those paints also do something else: they reject heat at infrared wavelengths, which we humans cannot see with our eyes. This could allow buildings to cool down even more by radiative cooling."
The best performing white paints currently available typically reflect around 85% of incoming solar radiation. The remainder is absorbed by the chemical makeup of the paint. The researchers showed that simple modifications in a paint's ingredients could offer a significant jump, reflecting as much as 98% of incoming radiation.
Current white paints with high solar reflectance use titanium oxide. While the compound is very reflective of most visible and near-infrared light, it also absorbs ultraviolet and violet light. The compound's UV absorption qualities make it useful in sunscreen lotions, but they also lead to heating under sunlightwhich gets in the way of keeping a building as cool as possible.
The researchers examined replacing titanium oxide with inexpensive and readily available ingredients such as barite, which is an artist's pigment, and powered polytetrafluoroethylene, better known as Teflon. These ingredients help paints reflect UV light. The team also made further refinements to the paint's formula, including reducing the concentration of polymer binders, which also absorb heat.
"The potential cooling benefits this can yield may be realized in the near future because the modifications we propose are within the capabilities of the paint and coatings industry," said UCLA postdoctoral scholar Jyotirmoy Mandal, a Schmidt Science Fellow working in Raman's research group and the co-corresponding author on the research.
Beyond the advance, the authors suggested several long-term implications for further study, including mapping where such paints could make a difference, studying the effect of pollution on radiative cooling technologies, and on a global scale, if they could make a dent on the earth's own ability to reflect heat from the sun.
The researchers also noted that many municipalities and governments, including the state of California and New York City, have started to encourage cool-roof technologies for new buildings.
"We hope that the work will spur future initiatives in super-white coatings for not only energy savings in buildings, but also mitigating the heat island effects of cities, and perhaps even showing a practical way that, if applied on a massive, global scale could affect climate change," said Mandal, who has studied cooling paint technologies for several years. "This would require a collaboration among experts in diverse fields like optics, materials science and meteorology, and experts from the industry and policy sectors."
Explore further Researchers develop double-layered paint that reflects heat
Racists!
Black Paint Matters
Someone will call this RACIST. Bet on it.
White Supremacist Paints!
Now they need some super-black to be heat absorbent for winter use. And add a switch to convert between the two.
Promising, but in cities, very much dependent on the switch to electric vehicles as air pollution illuminates the benefits in short order.
Then theres the whole solar glare thing. Tall building design is just coming to terms with this.
solar cooling load via glass several times the load thru walls...just sayin’
“superwhite paints!” Oooo, racist paint!
For those who REALLY have to have the Black Face!
I wonder how Barite compares to titanium dioxide for price and stability.
Titanium Dioxide is one of the most expensive components in many formulas like paint and sealants. I believe it also has some effect on UV resistance and longevity.
I can’t stand most of the greenie stuff done in homebuilding, but it it makes economic sense without too much aesthetic destruction, go for it.
You can safely dismiss any article whose headline proclaims cost savings only to find the article contains no hard numbers.
And super racists at that. At least it isn’t super master white paint. 8>)
For private homes, a better solution is replace the roof with a new one that has more vents on the roof and better insulation qualities (e.g., California Title 24 regulations). The new roof on my house has cut the electric usage from 1005 kWh for June 2019 to 930 kWh for June 2020. Even with the current heat wave, my house now shuts down the air conditioner by 11 pm, instead of shutting down at 3-4 am!
Two years ago, I reroofed and added vented soffits. I use whirly gig turbine vents instead of a ridge vent (upon the advice of a building scientist friend of mine)
Last November, we added 12” of cellulose insulation to the ceiling. I also air sealed with 2 component spray foam everywhere I could reach without removing the existing insulation.
I haven’t compared all winter bills yet, but the first month was a 30% savings.
Air sealing makes a tremendous difference by completely encapsulating the walls and preventing small amounts of air infiltration from multiple locations.
ok folks,
sounds good till you think about it. there is reflective heat and radiating heat. This might stop one but causa problems for the other.
It is more complex that just white paint
Why do desert dwellers wear black:
https://www.csmonitor.com/1980/0312/031243.html
White is best again!
They wear black to fight Mummies...............
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