Energy and Built Environment (Jun 2021)

Effect of the spectrally selective features of the cover and emitter combination on radiative cooling performance

  • Mingke Hu,
  • Suhendri,
  • Bin Zhao,
  • Xianze Ao,
  • Jingyu Cao,
  • Qiliang Wang,
  • Saffa Riffat,
  • Yuehong Su,
  • Gang Pei

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 251 – 259

Abstract

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Radiative cooling (RC) shows good potential for building energy saving by throwing waste heat to the cosmos in a passive and sustainable manner. However, most available radiative coolers suffer from low cooling flux. The situation becomes even deteriorated in the daytime when radiative coolers are exposed to direct sunlight. To tackle this challenge, an idea of employing both a spectrally selective cover and a spectrally selective emitter is proposed in this study as an alternative approach. A comparative study is conducted among four RC modules with different spectral characteristics for the demonstration of how the spectral profiles of the cover and the emitter affects the RC performance. The results under given conditions show that the RC module with a spectrally selective cover and a spectrally selective emitter (SC/SE) reaches a net RC power of 62.4 W/m2 when the solar radiation is 800 W/m2, which is about 1.8 times that of the typical RC module with a spectrally non-selective cover and a spectrally selective emitter (n-SC/SE). When the ambient temperature is 30 °C, the SC/SE based RC module realizes a daytime sub-ambient temperature reduction of 20.0 °C, standing for a further temperature decrement of 9.2 °C compared to the n-SC/SE based RC module.

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