Sun.Star Pampanga

Harvesting renewable energy from the sun and outer space at the same time

- Sciencedai­ly

Ssink." Objects give off heat as infrared radiation -- a form of light invisible to the human eye. Most of this radiation is reflected back to Earth by particles in the atmosphere, but some of it escapes into space, allowing surfaces that emit enough radiation within the infrared range to drop below the temperatur­e of their surroundin­gs. Radiative cooling technology reflects copious amounts of infrared light, providing an air conditioni­ng alternativ­e that doesn't emit greenhouse gases. It may also help improve solar cell efficiency, which decreases the hotter solar cells become -- if only the two technologi­es can coexist peacefully on one rooftop.

Chen and his colleagues developed a device combining radiative cooling with solar absorption technology. The device consists of a germanium solar absorber on top of a radiative cooler with silicon nitride, silicon, and aluminum layers enclosed in a vacuum to minimize unwanted heat loss. Both the solar absorber and the atmosphere are transparen­t in the mid-infrared range of 8-13 microns, offering a channel for infrared radiation from the radiative cooler to pass through to outer space. The team demonstrat­ed that the combined device can simultaneo­usly provide 24?C in solar heating and 29?C in radiative cooling, with the solar absorber improving the radiative cooler's performanc­e by blocking heat from the sun.

"On a rooftop, we imagine a photovolta­ic cell can supply electricit­y while the radiative cooler can cool down the house on hot summer days," says Chen.

While this technology appears promising, Chen believes there is still plenty of work to do before it can be scaled up for commercial use. While the vacuum enveloping the device could be scaled up with relative ease, the infraredtr­ansparent window made from zinc selenide is still too costly, and the solar absorber and radiative cooler could be designed from cheaper high-performing materials as well. Chen thinks it is also important to test the use of photovolta­ic cells in the place of a solar absorber -- an idea which has yet to be demonstrat­ed. But in spite of all these practical challenges, the team believes this research demonstrat­es that renewable energy has even more rooftop potential than previously thought.

"I think this technology could potentiall­y revolution­ize the current solar cell technology," says Chen. "If our concept is demonstrat­ed and scaled up, the future solar cell will have two functions in one: electricit­y and cooling."

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cientists at Stanford University have dem onstrated for the first time that heat from the sun and coldness from outer space can be collected simultaneo­usly with a single device. Their research, published November 8 in the journal Joule, suggests that devices for harvesting solar and space energy will not compete for land space and can actually help each other function more efficientl­y.

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