Nature Communications (Jan 2024)

Scalable nano-architecture for stable near-blackbody solar absorption at high temperatures

  • Yifan Guo,
  • Kaoru Tsuda,
  • Sahar Hosseini,
  • Yasushi Murakami,
  • Antonio Tricoli,
  • Joe Coventry,
  • Wojciech Lipiński,
  • Juan F. Torres

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-44672-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Light trapping enhancement by nanostructures is ubiquitous in engineering applications, for example, in improving highly-efficient concentrating solar thermal (CST) technologies. However, most nano-engineered coatings and metasurfaces are not scalable to large surfaces ( > 100 m2) and are unstable at elevated temperatures ( > 850 °C), hindering their wide-spread adoption in CST. Here, we propose a scalable layer nano-architecture that can significantly enhance the solar absorption of an arbitrary material. Our electromagnetics modelling predicts that the absorptance of cutting-edge light-absorbers can be further enhanced by more than 70%, i.e. relative improvement towards blackbody absorption from a baseline value without the nano-architecture. Experimentally, the nano-architecture yields a solar absorber that is 35% optically closer to a blackbody, even after long-term (1000 h) high-temperature (900 °C) ageing in air. A stable solar absorptance of more than 97.88 ± 0.14% is achieved, to the best of our knowledge, the highest so far reported for these extreme ageing conditions. The scalability of the layer nano-architecture is further demonstrated with a drone-assisted deposition, paving the way towards a simple yet significant solar absorptance boosting and maintenance method for existing and newly developed CST absorbing materials.