Radiative cooling of solar absorbers using a visibly transparent photonic crystal thermal blackbody
Stanford University · Imperial College London
Abstract
A solar absorber, under the sun, is heated up by sunlight. In many applications, including solar cells and outdoor structures, the absorption of sunlight is intrinsic for either operational or aesthetic considerations, but the resulting heating is undesirable. Because a solar absorber by necessity faces the sky, it also naturally has radiative access to the coldness of the universe. Therefore, in these applications it would be very attractive to directly use the sky as a heat sink while preserving solar absorption properties. Here we experimentally demonstrate a visibly transparent thermal blackbody, based on a silica photonic crystal. When placed on a silicon absorber under sunlight, such a blackbody…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 50.31
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Radiative cooling
- Sunlight
- Radiative transfer
- Thermal
- Absorption (acoustics)
- Renewable energy
- Black-body radiation
- Thermal radiation
- Affordable and clean energy