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Efficient radiative cooling emitter adopting the wavelength conversion of giant CdSe/ZnS core-shell nanocrystals

Authors
Son, S.Jeon, S.Bae, J.H.Lee, S.Y.Chae, D.Chae, J.-Y.Paik, T.Lee, H.Oh, S.J.
Issue Date
Nov-2021
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Keywords
CdSe/ZnS; Daytime radiative cooling; Giant core-shell; Photoluminescence quantum yield; Wavelength conversion
Citation
Materials Today Physics, v.21
Journal Title
Materials Today Physics
Volume
21
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/49612
DOI
10.1016/j.mtphys.2021.100496
ISSN
2542-5293
Abstract
Daytime radiative cooling is an eco-friendly, temperature-cooling mechanism that uses the inherent properties of a material without energy consumption. To realize a high daytime radiative cooling ability, it is necessary to minimize light absorption in the solar spectrum (0.3–2.5 μm) and maximize the emissivity in the atmospheric transmittance window (8–13 μm). Currently, the solar reflective layer of a radiative cooling material has the limitation of absorbing UV light, which can reduce the cooling performance. We attempted to solve this problem via UV-to-visible wavelength conversion using CdSe/ZnS giant core-shell structures. By applying this strategy, a wavelength conversion-type radiative cooling emitter (WC-RCE) was fabricated using “giant” CdSe/ZnS core-shell nanocrystals embedded into a polymeric membrane to establish minimized absorption within the UV and short-visible regions, which constitute up to 17.28% of the total solar spectrum. The applied g-NCs have a high photoluminescence quantum yield and a large Stokes shift, and can resolve the absorption in reflective layers, such as silver, by re-emitting the wavelength of the absorbed UV rays into the visible region. Compared with a conventional RCE, the WC-RCE achieves further cooling by 0.38 °C on average from outdoor measurements. Thus, a wavelength conversion strategy was confirmed for efficient daytime radiative cooling. © 2021
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