Passive Radiative Thermostat Enabled by Phase-Change Photonic Nanostructures
ORAL
Abstract
A thermostat senses the temperature of a physical system and switches heating or cooling devices on or off, regulating the flow of heat to maintain the system’s temperature near a desired set point. Taking advantage of recent advances in radiative heat transfer technologies, here we propose a passive radiative thermostat based on phase-change photonic nanostructures for thermal regulation at room temperature. By self-adjusting their visible to mid-IR absorptivity and emissivity responses depending on the ambient temperature, the proposed devices use the sky to passively cool or heat during day-time using the phase-change transition temperature as the set point, while at night-time temperature is maintained at or below ambient. We simulate the performance of a passive nanophotonic thermostat design based on vanadium dioxide thin films, showing daytime passive cooling (heating) with respect to ambient in hot (cold) days, maintaining an equilibrium temperature approximately locked within the phase transition region. Passive radiative thermostats can potentially enable novel thermal management technologies, for example, to moderate diurnal temperature in regions with extreme annual thermal swings.
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Presenters
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Wilton De Melo Kort-Kamp
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Authors
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Wilton De Melo Kort-Kamp
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Shobhita Kramadhati
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Abul K Azad
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Matthew T Reiten
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Diego A R Dalvit
Los Alamos National Laboratory