Passive radiative cooling using temperature-dependent emissivity can sometimes outperform static emitters
Yeonghoon Jin, Jin-Woo Cho, and Mikhail A. Kats

TL;DR
This paper introduces a temperature-dependent emissivity emitter that switches between selective and broadband states, potentially outperforming static emitters in passive radiative cooling by maintaining high cooling power across temperatures.
Contribution
It proposes a novel temperature-tunable emitter using VO$_2$ phase transition, enhancing passive cooling efficiency over static emitters across varying temperatures.
Findings
The proposed emitter can switch emissivity states based on temperature.
VO$_2$ phase transition enables tunable emissivity in the atmospheric window.
Potential for improved passive cooling performance across temperature ranges.
Abstract
In passive sky-facing radiative cooling, wavelength-selective thermal emitters in the atmospheric transparency window of 8-13 m can reach lower temperatures compared to broadband emitters, but broadband emitters always have higher cooling power when the emitter is warmer than the ambient. Here, we propose a temperature-tunable thermal emitter that switches between a wavelength-selective state -- with high emissivity only in the atmospheric transparency window of 8-13 m -- and a broadband-emissive state with high emissivity in the 3-25 m range, thus maintaining high cooling potential across all temperatures. We also propose a realization of such a temperature-tunable emitter using the phase transition of vanadium dioxide (VO), which can be tuned to the ambient temperature using a combination of doping and defect engineering.
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermal Radiation and Cooling Technologies · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Radiative Heat Transfer Studies
