
Researchers developed plastic polyethylene films, available in a rainbow of colors, that can trap or deflect heat and are very lightweight, strong and bendable.
Credit: Felice Frankel, MIT
Adaptable films show promise for use in buildings, wearables, camouflage and solar cells
Researchers have developed new plastic films that stay cool when exposed to sunlight and are very lightweight, strong and bendable. The versatile materials come in a variety of colors and could be incorporated into architectural and wearable products to regulate the temperature of buildings and people without requiring any power.
“Materials used for wearable technologies and architecture applications require simultaneous control of multiple properties to combine visual appeal with thermal comfort,” said Svetlana Boriskina, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA, and leader of the research team that developed the materials. “We accomplished this challenging balance by creating the first plastic-based flexible material that combines various optical properties with passive thermal regulation via both conduction and radiation.”
In The Optical Society (OSA) journal Optical Materials Express, the researchers describe how they created the new films by engineering the properties of the commonly used and inexpensive plastic polyethylene and then added color using nanoparticles and pigments. The resulting composite films are durable yet flexible and offer a variety of combinations of optical, thermal and mechanical properties.
In addition to staying cool when exposed to light, the new materials can also be engineered to trap heat, which could be used to make warm clothes or to create camouflage that hides a person or vehicle from night vision cameras by cloaking the heat they produce.
“The materials and processes we used to make these composite films are already commercially available and could likely be used for inexpensive high-throughput fabrication of the films on large scales,” said Boriskina. “The films have a host of potential applications, including being used as substrates and overcoats for thin-film solar cells and other flexible electronic devices as well as for a variety of wearable devices and garments.
Stretching plastic films
Typically, the color and temperature control properties of materials are optimized separately for different applications. To modify these properties simultaneously, the researchers began with films made of ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene. By physically stretching the films to various degrees, the researchers found they could change the material’s optical, mechanical and thermal properties.
“Stretching the film forces the polymer chains in the plastic to align in one direction parallel to each other, which is very different than what is seen in typical plastics,” explained Boriskina. “We demonstrated that this stretching gives the plastic new and useful properties, including ultra-high thermal conductivity, increased broadband transparency, reduced haze, raised melting temperature and high tensile strength.”
To add color and additional optical properties to the films, the researchers embedded various nanoparticles into the polymer before stretching the material. Using this process, it is possible to design a composite that does not get hot under sunlight by using nanoparticles that absorb visible light but do not absorb the infrared solar heat. Using particles that efficiently scatter mid-infrared light, on the other hand, will make a material that traps heat.
Films with optimized haze parameters could be used as transparent overcoats on thin-film solar cells to increase light absorption while simultaneously helping to reduce the solar cell temperature and increase efficiency.
Testing the samples
The researchers created a variety of sample films and tested them using artificial sunlight from a solar simulator in the lab. Films containing dark silicon nanoparticles, for example, exhibited temperatures 20 degrees Celsius cooler than a black reference paper colored with black dyes and pigments. Using infrared camera imaging, the researchers also observed that heat spread laterally along a sample illuminated by a laser beam. This type of heat spreading helps reduce the temperature of the illuminated hot spot and promotes cooling because the heat travels to areas of the material surface not directly illuminated by light.
The researchers plan to test their new materials outside with natural sunlight before moving forward with commercialization plans. They are also using their findings from this research to develop polyethylene fibers and woven or knitted textiles that would be useful for wearable technologies.
Learn more: New Plastic Films Deflect or Trap Heat with Zero Energy Required
The Latest on: Adaptable plastic films
via Google News
The Latest on: Adaptable plastic films
- Global E-Paper Display Market Share Will Reach USD 11,400 Million By 2026: Facts & Factorson January 11, 2021 at 3:33 am
Facts and Factors have published a new research report titled "E-Paper Display Market by Product (Auxiliary Displays, ...
- RAW architecture uses recycled plastic + bamboo for workshop and residence in indonesiaon January 8, 2021 at 5:29 am
piyandeling is composed of three buildings and three main construction materials: recycled plastic, a local type of sympodial bamboo, and local stone for the foundations. the artisan workshop – ...
- Design and Material Development for an Ice Skate Bladeon January 5, 2021 at 4:00 pm
It is only this film of water that ... rigidity of the basic skate. Adaptable and Interchangeable Time-consuming blade grinding, required with traditional steel blades, is unnecessary with the skate ...
- Suction cups lift almost anythingon January 4, 2021 at 4:00 pm
packaged goods such as film-packed and blister-packed products, cardboard boxes, and soft bags; plastic film and paper; and CDs and DVDs. Here’s a look at some recent innovations from Schmalz.
- AMP Robotics raises $55M for its AI-based recycling roboton January 4, 2021 at 12:00 pm
It can also sort plastic film by color, clarity, and opacity. Here’s how it works: A three-armed picker robot with an adaptable frame location and height sits on a conveyor belt where a moveable ...
- Russell reveals being more adaptable is the key lesson from Mercedes F1 outingon December 27, 2020 at 1:10 am
George Russell says that learning to be more adaptable as a driver was one of the key lessons from his one-off experience with Mercedes in Formula 1 this year. The Briton was drafted in by the ...
- FX comedy series 'Reservation Dogs' set in rural Oklahoma, written by Oklahoma filmmakeron December 22, 2020 at 11:08 am
and fighting it. The shot-in-Okmulgee pilot was written by Harjo and Waititi, whose films include “Thor: Ragnarok.” Both, along with Garrett Basch, are executive producers. “Sterlin Harjo ...
- Compo-SiL® Introducing an Easy Path to Plastic Footprint Reduction for Manufacturerson December 17, 2020 at 9:01 am
Hsinchu, Taiwan, December 17, 2020 - General Silicones Co. Ltd. (GS), based in Hsinchu City, Taiwan, acknowledges that manufacturers are now looking for plastic alternatives to improve the ...
- Plastic bearings have their placeon December 15, 2020 at 4:00 pm
Base polymers have high resistivity, and are adaptable to exhibit antistatic ... For this reason, where weight degrades performance, plastic bearings are an advantage. Figure 3 Plastic-bearing ...
- Organic Vapor Phase Deposition for Optoelectronic Deviceson April 14, 2020 at 4:18 am
Virtually all of the organic materials used in thin film devices have sufficiently high vapor pressures to be evaporated at temperatures below 400°C, and then be transported in the vapor phase by an ...
via Bing News