Spin Your Own Passive Cooling Fibres

When the temperature climbs, itās an eternal problem: how to stay cool. An exciting field of materials science lies in radiative cooling materials, things which reflect so much incoming heat that they can cool down from their own radiation rather than heating up in the sun. Itās something [NightHawkInLight] has been working on over a series, and heās dropped a very long video weāve placed below. Itās ostensibly about spinning radiative cooling fibers, but in fact provides a huge quantity of background as well as a bonus explanation of cotton candy machines.
These materials achieve their reflectivity by creating a surface full of microscopic bubbles. Itās the same process that makes snow so white and reflective, and in this case itās achieved by dissolving a polymer in a mixture of two solvents. The lower boiling point solvent evaporates first leaving the polymer full of microscopic bubbles of the higher boiling point solvent, and once these evaporate they leave behind the tiny voids. In the video heās using PLA, and we see him experimenting with different solvents and lubricants to achieve the desired result. The cotton candy machine comes in trying to create fibers by melting solid samples, something which doesnāt work as well as it could so instead he draws them by hand with a small rake.
When he tests his mat of fibers in bright sunlight the effect is almost magical if we didnāt already know the mechanism, they cool down by a few degrees compared to ambient temperature and the surrounding control materials. This is a fascinating material, and we hope weāll see more experimenters working with it. You wonāt be surprised to hear weāve featured his work before.
from Blog ā Hackaday https://ift.tt/uDqh8La
Comments
Post a Comment