Abstract

AbstractWater condensation on a surface strongly affects its effective emissivity, especially in the atmospheric window, a wavelength range essential for outdoor applications related to energetically passive cooling and heating. The evolution of emissivity of a silicon surface during dropwise and filmwise water deposition is studied. The evolution of the spectral radiative properties shows that the increase in effective emissivity due to the growth of a droplet pattern is steeper than for a growing water film of equivalent thickness. The change of surface emissivity takes place in the first moments of condensation where droplets as small as 10 µm drastically impact the reflectance of the pristine surface. The upper limit of effective emissivity is reached for a droplet radius or film thickness of 50 µm. During dropwise condensation, effective emissivity is weighted by the drop surface coverage and then remains within an asymptotic maximum value of 0.8, while in case of filmwise condensation, it is shown to reach 0.9 corresponding to water emissivity. Micrometer‐scale spatially‐resolved infrared spectral images enable to correlate the spatial variation of spectral properties to the droplet size and localization. Such findings are of interest to the implementation of moisture‐controlled emissivity tuning and radiative sky‐coolers for dew harvesting.

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