Abstract

The excessive use of heating systems in cold climates and air conditioning systems in hotter climates is resulting in the extensive use of electricity in order to maintain such systems. This in turn leads to the greater use of fossil fuels and higher emissions of carbon dioxide and other pollutant gases. The growing amount of carbon dioxide emissions is contributing to the problem of global warming, hence increasing the need for alternative technologies to heating and air conditioning systems. One such alternative is the production of thin films which can be used as window glazing coatings to construct ‘smart windows’. These windows have the greatest use within constant climates. In cold climates, windows with high solar transmittance and low thermal emittance are needed; this allows sunlight into the building to brighten the room but stops heat from escaping thus warming the room. In constantly hot climates, materials that are transparent in the visible region but reflective in the infrared, such as thin metallic coatings, can be used to ensure that the inside of the building remains cool. These solar control coatings, however, pose a problem in varying climates such as in northern and central Europe. For these cases, materials that have altering properties owing to external surroundings could be the solution. These ‘chromatic’ materials include several categories, such as photochromic glasses and polymers, thermochromic metal oxides and electrochromic materials. This review will begin with a discussion as to the chemistry behind the solar control coatings and chromic materials including ambient radiation and the ideal of a black-body object. It will then look in depth at each class of these chromic materials considering experimental results and theoretical insight as well as production techniques and applications.

Highlights

  • The world’s energy consumption is continuously increasing and this creates a heavy demand for renewable energy sources to be developed

  • This review has discussed the technology of solar control low-emittance coatings (low-E) and chromogenic materials for the applications of solar control

  • Solar control and low-E materials are the most established. These are materials based on spectral selectivity; angular selectivity materials propose the need for further research and development

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The world’s energy consumption is continuously increasing and this creates a heavy demand for renewable energy sources to be developed. Thin films for solar control application ambient temperature, solar materials can be designed in order to achieve the desired properties (Granqvist 1991) These include materials with high electrical conductivity and the combination of high solar absorbance or transmittance with low thermal emittance; these properties are useful for low-emittance windows coatings. These design principles and physical mechanism have been the basis of a number of thin films coated on metallic substrates. Each of these different types of chromogenic materials will be discussed further in subsequent sections of this review

Thermochromic coatings for thin films
Photochromic coatings for thin films
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call