Abstract

Microencapsulated phase change materials (MPCMs) are usually limited in photothermal conversion due to their poor visible light absorbability and low thermal conductivity. Owing to a direct band gap of 2.0–2.2 eV, the semiconductor cuprous oxide (Cu2O) has attracted intense interest in solar energy harvest. Shape-dependent optical properties of Cu2O semiconductors are mainly focused on crystals enclosed by three low-index facets ({1 0 0}, {1 1 0} and {1 1 1}). Here, we successfully design and fabricate the Cu2O encapsulated MPCMs from cube, truncated cube, 26-hedron, and truncated octahedron to octahedron under precise control of NaOH. A possible growth mechanism to explore the correlation between selective adsorption of OH− on Cu2O facets and MPCMs shape evolution is suggested based on density functional theory calculations. The thermal analysis shows that the octahedral MPCMs enclosed by {1 1 1} facets possess latent heat of 148.9 J/g and photothermal conversion efficiency of 82.65 % under irradiation of visible light. Differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) profiles of the MPCMs maintain good coincidence with only a slight fluctuation of phase transition temperatures and the associated enthalpies during the 200-cyclic scans, demonstrating excellent phase change reversibility and thermal durability. Our studies unambiguously provide a strategy for tailoring the optical properties of MPCMs to greatly harvest solar energy for green building materials, anti-ice coating etc. in the future.

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