Space cooling and heating consume huge energy resources globally, while existing cooling/heating equipment can only address indoor temperature control. In this work, we report a multifunctional layered Janus-coated fabric (JCF) with radiative cooling/solar heating/Joule heating, which can utilize space and the sun as a source of cooling and heating. By adjusting the reflectivity, emissivity, and absorptivity of the coating, the fabric performs a thermal management function in a complex and changeable environment without consuming energy. In cooling mode, the cooling layer achieves a high solar reflectivity of 96% and an infrared emissivity of 96%, resulting in a 3.1 °C reduction in ambient temperature without any convective shielding. In addition, it reduces temperatures by 1.6 °C on human arms and by 5.1 °C inside houses, respectively. In the heating mode, the heating layer demonstrates excellent light-to-heat conversion efficiency under direct sunlight, achieving a 13.3 °C radiation warming ability, 16 °C heating effect on the surface of the arm, and a 12.8 °C temperature increase in the house. Furthermore, when switched to active heating for temperature regulation, JCF exhibits fast electrical response, high-efficiency electrical heat conversion capability, and stable electrical heat circulation capability. Building energy simulations indicate that widespread deployment of JCF across China could lead to a reduction in cooling and heating energy consumption by more than 25 MJ/m in 80% of cities. This multifunctional Janus-coated fabric not only provides a viable engineering path for the practical application of radiative heat management technology but also demonstrates its potential applications in human thermal comfort, smart wearable and building energy efficiency.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.4c19875 | DOI Listing |
MRS Energy Sustain
December 2024
Department of Materials Science, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB3 0FS UK.
Abstract: Heating and cooling combined constitute the world's largest form of end-use energy and the largest source of carbon emissions. It is therefore interesting to explore heat pumps based on caloric materials, which offer promising and environmentally friendly alternatives to gas combustion and vapor compression. The possibility of replacing these traditional methods of heating and cooling motivates the current research on caloric materials and devices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Public Health
March 2025
School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States.
Low-income families in dry regions, including in the Southwestern United States, frequently cool their homes with evaporative ("swamp") coolers (ECs). While inexpensive and energy efficient compared to central air conditioners, ECs pull unfiltered outdoor air into the home, creating a health hazard to occupants when wildfire smoke and heat events coincide. A community-engaged research project to reduce wildfire smoke in homes was conducted in California's San Joaquin Valley in homes of Spanish-speaking agricultural workers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFF1000Res
March 2025
Department of Mathematics, Bahir Dar University, Bahir Dar, Amhara, Ethiopia.
Background: This research investigates the unsteady magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) flow, heat, and mass transfer of tangent hyperbolic ternary hybrid nanofluids over a permeable stretching sheet. The study considers three types of nanoparticles-aluminum oxide (Al₂O₃), copper (Cu), and titanium oxide (TiO₂)-dispersed in a base fluid of ethylene glycol (C₂H₆O₂). This ternary hybrid nanofluid (Al₂O₃-Cu-TiO₂/C₂H₆O₂) has potential applications in cooling systems, biomedical uses for targeted drug delivery and hyperthermia treatments, heat exchangers, and polymer processing techniques like extrusion and casting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
February 2025
Institute of Building Materials Research (IBAC), RWTH Aachen University, Schinkelstr. 3, 52062 Aachen, Germany.
Carbon-textile-reinforced concrete (CTRC) is increasingly being used in the construction industry as a high-performance composite material combining non-metallic textile reinforcement with concrete. Known for its exceptional characteristics such as tensile strength, density, and durability, CTRC also exhibits electrical conductivity, enabling efficient electrical heat generation within building components. This study develops and validates a thermal model to predict the temperature evolution of electrically heated CTRC, incorporating Newton's law of cooling and Joule's heating principle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
March 2025
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, 70803, USA.
Herein, we report hybrid fibrous artificial muscles with reversible actuation, i.e., expansion upon cooling and contraction upon heating, under external compression.
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