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Scientists Are Using the Cold of Outer Space To Rethink Air Conditioning (qz.com) 218

A California-based company called SkyCool Systems is in the early stages of manufacturing a cooling system that's more energy efficient than anything humans have used for a century. It's doing it using radiative cooling, a concept that was used in the Middle East and India hundreds of years ago. Quartz reports: To understand how radiative cooling works, forget for a moment the sun. Think instead about the night sky. Once the sun has set and the cooler evening begins, just about everything on Earth -- the soil, the grass, the roofs of homes, even people -- give off heat. A lot of that heat rises up into the atmosphere where it effectively transmits out into space, never returning to Earth. The night sky is very chilly, and objects sending heat upward at night send up more heat than the whole sky is sending back down.

Hundreds of years ago, long before refrigeration existed, people in India and Iran used this basic concept to make ice in climates with temperatures above freezing. Water was filled into large and shallow ceramic pools that were surrounded and insulated by hay, and then the pools were left out on clear nights. It sounds counterintuitive, but if the air wasn't too far above freezing, the heat emitted by the water made it lower in temperature than the surrounding air, allowing it to freeze. It's the same principle at play when you wake up on a summer morning to find a layer of frost or dew. Now the people at SkyCool are taking that principle and applying it to the modern era, employing it to reimagine how we cool our homes, data centers, and refrigerators.
SkyCool's three co-founders created a material that helps facilitate the radiative cooling process.

"Their invention looks a lot like a solar panel," reports Quartz. "A flat metal panel is covered in a sheet of the material -- a high-tech film -- the trio invented. The material reflects the light and heat of the sun so effectively that the temperature beneath the film can drop 5 to 10-degrees Celsius (41 to 50-degrees Fahrenheit) lower than the air around it. A system of small pipes circulating through the metal panel beneath the film are exposed to that colder temperature, cooling the fluid inside before it's sent out to current-day refrigeration systems." A new study published today in the journal Nature Sustainability says radiative cooling could one day be its own, electricity-free system.
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Scientists Are Using the Cold of Outer Space To Rethink Air Conditioning

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  • by fintux ( 798480 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @03:06AM (#59049000)
    While 5 and 10 degrees Celcius are 41 and 50 degrees in Fahrenheit, this is when we are talking about absolute temperatures. One Celcius degree difference is 1.8 Fahrenheit degrees difference. So the drop is not 41 ... 50 degrees, but 9 ... 18 degrees Fahrenheit.
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      This is why change in temperature or difference in temperature should be indicated in Kelvin or Rankine.
    • by asylumx ( 881307 )
      FYI It's fixed in the article now (but still not in the summary)
    • So the drop is not 41 ... 50 degrees, but 9 ... 18 degrees Fahrenheit.

      Ok, so its saying if it is 98F out, it will cool my house to 80F working at maximum.

      That's still too freakin' hot on a muggy day out.

      Call me back when it can cool to 74-75F during the day sustained at minimum.

      It might be ok for evening, to get it to 72F so I can sleep, but 80F indoors during the middle of the day is very uncomfortable.

      Especially in the high humidity down here.

      Hell, as it is now, my AC clicks on full time about mid A

      • by XanC ( 644172 )

        "cooling the fluid inside before it's sent out to current-day refrigeration systems"

        It sounds like this is meant to be used in concert with your normal air conditioner, giving it a boost in effectiveness and efficiency.

      • That's why it doesn't make sense.
        Then again, they did jam "SPAYSE!!!" in there trying to win the buzzword bingo, along with "for centuries", "sky" and "renewable", so it's kinda by design.

        It doesn't cool at all. It's a very special kind of mirror.
        I.e. It reflects the sunlight at near- and mid-infrared frequencies, thus creating a temperature gradient with the surrounding area, while it is exposed to the sun.
        Put it in the shade... nothing happens.
        I.e. It doesn't work at night.

        Cooling with SPAYSE!!! is becaus

    • I didn't see the conversion problem in any of TFAs but this was in the second link on quartz.

      The material reflects the light and heat of the sun so effectively that the temperature beneath the film can drop 5 to 10-degrees Celsius (9 to 18-degrees Fahrenheit)

  • by mentil ( 1748130 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @03:08AM (#59049004)

    Err, a 5 to 10 degree change in Celsius would be a 9-18 degree change in Fahrenheit. If only there were some kind of device that let people easily do mathematical operations...

    • by AleRunner ( 4556245 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @03:15AM (#59049022)
      Three out of three first comments making exactly this point. Maybe there's still some hope for Slashdot as a news for nerds site.
      • by PolygamousRanchKid ( 1290638 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @07:43AM (#59049670)

        Maybe there's still some hope for Slashdot as a news for nerds site.

        Maybe there's still some hope that the US will finally abandon archaic imperial units, and finally shift to the metric system.

        Otherwise, somebody somewhere will inevitably make a conversion error, and it might have fatal consequences.

        • by lgw ( 121541 )

          Maybe there's still some hope that the US will finally abandon archaic imperial units, and finally shift to the metric system.

          We don't use imperial units or SI, being neither a colony of the UK nor France. We use US units. For us, a hundredweight is 100 pounds, and thus a ton is 2000. The British Empire had its "long hundredweights" and "long tons", best forgotten.

          Admittedly, SI took the same notion of rationalizing units a step further, making the furlong a round 200 meters instead of 220 yards, but then they messed it all up with "hectairs", instead of just calling an acre 200x20 meters like sensible people.

          The US system is m

        • Otherwise, somebody somewhere will inevitably make a conversion error, and it might have fatal consequences.

          Lessee here.... 0.357 inches... little bigger than a third of an inch.... that's gotta be 'bout 9mm don'tcha think?

    • There probably is, but it only works at night.
  • So here we go again (Score:5, Informative)

    by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @03:16AM (#59049028)

    More publicly funded university research that the researchers are turning into a company and intending to sell for a profit to us - the people who completely paid for its development (as well as their salaries).

    • by DRJlaw ( 946416 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @08:17AM (#59049756)

      More publicly funded university research that the researchers are turning into a company and intending to sell for a profit to us - the people who completely paid for its development (as well as their salaries).

      No, you didn't "completely [pay] for its development (as well as their salaries)." Federal funding of research has been declining for decades [sciencemag.org], and the entire point of the Bayh Dole Act [wikipedia.org] was to further extract the government from funding research programs. They are now funded by a mixture of government funding, private sponsored research agreements, technology development office income, and yes, student tuition (especially salaries for the latter). University technology development offices are expressly charged with making money from basic research to fund future basic research.

      You want to pay pennies on the dollar yet claim the results. That's even before reaching the problem that research labs do not turn out commercial grade products, and private entities are the only ones doing the engineering and commercialization that produce those products -- typically while paying royalties back to to the University.

      Well, you can't. Completely pay for something's development, or shut the hell up. You can't even support college education state support at levels of decade ago [pbs.org], much less what your parents had [npr.org]. Try paying for that before claiming that you've "completely paid" for anything, because you haven't. Not even close.

      • by organgtool ( 966989 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @10:55AM (#59050504)
        I want to pay for 100% of the research and have the results enter the public domain or pay for 0% of the research and allow the results to remain the property of the sources of private funding. I support both public and private funding as sources of research but I don't want ANY public funding to go to research in which the results can be kept secret or patented.
        • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

          Why would you want that?

          100% taxpayer funded, no patents allowed:
          In this case the government curates all university R&D funding. yuck. Even worse, commercial companies thwart university research since the results could not be patented. Even worse yet, if the results are not patented all that US government spending goes right to foreign companies.

          0% taxpayer funded, private patents allowed:
          Corporations curate all university R&D funding. No incentive for pure research since commercial companies wo

    • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @10:56AM (#59050510)

      More publicly funded university research that the researchers are turning into a company and intending to sell for a profit to us - the people who completely paid for its development (as well as their salaries).

      A) Last I checked Stanford (where the research was done) is a private university, not a publicly funded one
      B) You have cited no data indicating funding for the research on this came from a dime of taxpayer dollars
      C) Even if they did receive public funding, so what? If they can turn it into a business good for them. Not like you were going to do it.

      It will (hopefully) create jobs and tax revenue (even if not publicly funded) and patents (public data on how it works) so what exactly are you bitching about? Taxpayers will get their money back multi-fold if this turns into a successful enterprise via tax revenue. You think the data should just be thrown out there to rot? Or maybe you think you should be the one to get to build a business off their work even though you haven't lifted a finger.

      • Or maybe you think you should be the one to get to build a business off their work even though you haven't lifted a finger.

        Uh, isn't this basically what every major corporation does already? Why is it ok for a private citizen or corporation to expect to reap the rewards of someone's labor simply because they paid for it, but if we citizens expect the public to reap the rewards for labor that was paid for by taxes then suddenly that is bad?

        • Why is it ok for a private citizen or corporation to expect to reap the rewards of someone's labor simply because they paid for it, but if we citizens expect the public to reap the rewards for labor that was paid for by taxes then suddenly that is bad?

          We do reap the rewards for publicly funded research. We pay tax dollars which are then used to fund research which then results in businesses which means jobs. In fact we collectively get back many times the amount we pay in tax dollars in economic growth. Scientific research is the engine of a strong economy. If you pay indirectly for something you should expect an indirect payback which is EXACTLY what we the taxpayers get. We buy research to (eventually) get economic growth and it's a good investmen

          • We pay tax dollars which are then used to fund research which then results in businesses which means jobs

            You misspelled "which means privilege to create profit for your betters you filthy pleb".

            In fact we collectively get back many times the amount we pay in tax dollars in economic growth.

            There you go again... What's wrong with you? Is is some kind of a brain disease?
            You keep typing variations of "profit for your betters you filthy pleb" wrong.

            We buy research to (eventually) get economic growth and it's a good investment in general.

            AND AGAIN!
            You really should have that looked at by your local brain professional.
            Now you misspelled "profit for our betters you filthy pleb".

      • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

        A) Standord is a private university, not a publicly funded one

        Just to clarify: Just putting "private" in front of something doesn't mean government funding isn't involved. You can bet that the researchers apply for every grant possible, government or private. It's really a mix.

    • Ideas are a dime a dozen. The real work is in bringing an idea to fruition.

      Most university research, like the research that spawned this, comes up with a principle or an idea. Now someone is doing to work, at no cost to you, to create a real product from that idea. It might work out and lead to profit. It might not, and lead to losses. Someone else, not the taxpayers, is shouldering that risk.

    • The reverse here in Canada is that most universities require some kind of licensing agreement which in many many cases prohibits transfer of tech to commercial world. What ended up happen is once publications are out, other parties figured out the IP and no benefits stays in the university or Canada. There could be a 'happier' medium but a complex issue.
    • So long as anyone is free to use the output of the publicly funded research in the same way I see no issue. Of course, if they failed to publish all they learned or if they lock it away in a patent then you have a fair point.
  • Echoes of Asimov (Score:5, Interesting)

    by hazem ( 472289 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @03:19AM (#59049048) Journal

    I'm reminded of a passage from "Prelude to Foundation":

    No city so vast was ever recycled so tightly. No planet in the Galaxy had ever made so much use of solar power or went to such extremes to rid itself of waste heat. Glittering radiators stretched up into the thin upper atmosphere upon the nightside and were withdrawn into the metal city on the dayside. As the planet turned, the radiators rose as night progressively fell around the world and sank as day progressively broke. So Trantor always had an artificial asymmetry that was almost its symbol.

    • Re:Echoes of Asimov (Score:5, Interesting)

      by SomeoneFromBelgium ( 3420851 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @05:16AM (#59049346)

      For me the 'radiative cooling' reminded me of another Asimov book: The fantastic Voyage, destination brain II
      In it a scientist describes the air conditioning system of their vessel with which they are about to enter the blood steam of a living person. It is described as particles that capture the heat and then get radiated into space,...

  • Sounds fishy (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @03:59AM (#59049128) Homepage

    A few years ago, there were companies that sprung up to take advantage of federal tax rebates on solar by selling snake oil "solar" air conditioners. The gist of how it worked looked very similar to this - the hot refrigerant gas from the compressor was piped into an evacuated tube solar collector (ostensibly to add more heat to the refrigerant, which is actually counterintuitive to improving efficiency if you understand how the carnot cycle works), before continuing its journey to the condenser coil. Independent testing revealed these systems didn't save any energy at all.

    The companies pushing these things were also rather aggressive in defending their products against anyone calling them out on their bullshit. As near as I can tell, I think most of them got sued [kuam.com] out of existence for running a scam.

    I just can't help but think this looks like the exact same system, now with a thermodynamically valid technobabble explanation for how it supposedly operates. If it really were possible to radiate heat into space with the blazing hot sun beating down on your radiator, this could technically work. Until I start seeing the independent testing results though, I'll remain skeptical.

    • If it really were possible to radiate heat into space with the blazing hot sun beating down on your radiator, this could technically work.

      Err, I think it only works at night.

      • by dargaud ( 518470 )
        It can work during the day but it's less efficient. Take a solar oven: a parabola of mirror with something you place at the focal point. If you point it at the sun, the rays will converge on the thing you want to heat and it will heat with a speed proportional to the projected area of you parabola.
        Now if you point it straight up at the night sky, the heat radiated by the object at the focal point is all going towards the sky, so it radiates off at least twice more quickly than if it was simply laying on th
      • I think it only works at night.

        I think it only works on a clear night. It's fine in Iran, or maybe in California, but won't do much good under a cover of clouds.

      • "The core thing the material does is make this effect useful during the day," Raman says. "Most materials absorb enough sunlight to totally counteract the cooling effect. That's been the big issue. You couldn't do it during the day, when you need cooling the most."
        • "The core thing the material does is make this effect useful during the day," Raman says. "Most materials absorb enough sunlight to totally counteract the cooling effect. That's been the big issue. You couldn't do it during the day, when you need cooling the most."

          Maybe stick it in the shade? The big issue is that radiating heat is the dumbest and worst way to remove heat. If you want to get rid of heat in space you use a heatsink and transfer heat to it (typically via conduction) then you jettison the fucking heatsink. If you have an atmosphere to dump heat into, you use convection to cool your heatsink.

    • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

      The summary seems to suggest that this is AC for use at night. Maybe the idea is to cool a large heatsink overnight and use it to cool air during the day? (Or, more likely, the summary is rather unhelpful).

      • by skids ( 119237 )

        I don't know about this particular product but there are similar materials which also work during the day, in full sunlight. The trick is to bounce back every color of light except the color which your material is specially engineered to emit as black body radiation, and to choose that color of light optimally so you receive less of it from the sun/environment than you emit.

    • Re:Sounds fishy (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Bengie ( 1121981 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @08:24AM (#59049770)
      There's an IR hole in the atmosphere at a very specific wave length. They've created a mirror that reflects all other wave lengths but is also transparent to this specific IR wave length. The temperature of space at this wave length is about 2.4k. The temperature of ambient temperature objects on earth at this wave length is right about ambient temperature. This causes a temperature imbalance between space and the shaded objects, causing them to cool below ambient. Assuming this is the exact same tech I was reading about some time ago, this will also work in sun light, but does require a clear sky to function properly.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by DRJlaw ( 946416 )

      If it really were possible to radiate heat into space with the blazing hot sun beating down on your radiator, this could technically work. Until I start seeing the independent testing results though, I'll remain skeptical.

      Independent testing results like this [arstechnica.com]? Different material, same concept.

      In the heat of the day, a square meter of the wood could radiate away about 16W of power. At night, that figure shot up to 63W, for a 24-hour average of 53 Watts per square meter. At mid-day, if there was no source of

    • by DRJlaw ( 946416 )

      If it really were possible to radiate heat into space with the blazing hot sun beating down on your radiator, this could technically work. Until I start seeing the independent testing results though, I'll remain skeptical.

      Independent testing results like this? [arstechnica.com] Different material, same concept.

      In the heat of the day, a square meter of the wood could radiate away about 16W of power. At night, that figure shot up to 63W, for a 24-hour average of 53 Watts per square meter. At mid-day, if there was no source of

    • by torkus ( 1133985 )

      It's not snake oil - vapor adsorption refrigeration is a legitimate thing and it runs off heat. Read up on some 'technobabble' below:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      That said, it's far less efficient than the 'normal' vapor compression cycle. But welcome to the "benefit" of green rebates.

      As for radiating heat, heat pumps aside even, one would typically put an IR radiator in the shade to avoid that "blazing hot sun" ... but what do I know.

    • When I was in high school, in history class, we read was that ice production like what the summary described relied on over night winds to chill the water below freezing. I proposed a test of this theory. A few of my classmates and I designed and built setups similar to what the summary described, with one shielded from the wind but still open to the night sky.

      Though our experiment didn't produce any ice, the water exposed to the wind did cool a few degrees below the over night ambient low, while the water

  • by Grog6 ( 85859 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @04:06AM (#59049144)

    If you start a heat transfer, the rate of energy transport is proportional to the temperature difference.

    If the temperature changes, the rate of change of the heat transport lags, transferring faster than the current rate, and can make the temperature of the mass go below the ambient temperature, due to the rate of transport being non-zero, even though there's no temperature difference at the current instant.

    I see this on my computer, when testing new heatsink combos; there's a dip below ambient after the processor stops generating 150 or so watts, and returns to making 50 watts as the test ends.
    The heat flow flow maintains the higher level for a short while, due to the flow of heat from the rapidly cooling processor mass continuing for a bit.

    It's apparently proportional to the mass of the cooled object, as a huge mass of copper will do this more so than a small heat pipe heatsink.

    I could see freezing, or at least cooling a pool of water, even without the evaporative effect, which would be sealed off by this IR transmissive film.

    A simple 'space blanket should work; a large cooler should be enough mass. I think I'll set it up with a thermocouple and see. :)

  • by istartedi ( 132515 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @04:09AM (#59049154) Journal

    I give this summary a C, which is 4 to 6 alphabets lower than a B.

    • This is the second article I have read today making the same error. That is about one article in Celsius. (Both on different nerd-sites about different subjects...)

  • Desiccant based A/C (Score:5, Interesting)

    by maynard ( 3337 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @05:23AM (#59049358) Journal

    Somewhat off topic, but there's a YT channel where this guy has put together a homebrew desiccant based A/C system that's 3 - 5 times as efficient, compared to typical compressors with refrigerants as working fluids (standard A/C). I don't think the OP article here is directly related to that. But it's interesting. And shows there are still efficiency gains to be had in architectural cooling.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @07:21AM (#59049610)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by maynard ( 3337 )

        His COP specifically excludes the energy to heat the desiccant in the regenerator.

        He responds to that criticism in the video here:

        https://youtu.be/R_g4nT4a28U?t... [youtu.be]

        In the demonstration system, he uses an alcohol heater. But he points out there are multiple ways to generate that heat, including solar thermal directly (or photovoltaic). Further, he argues the difference between total thermal efficiency of the system versus COP. But that's a debate between you and him. Not me. Which is why I linked to the secti

        • You know, my Mustang is more fuel efficient than a Prius, provided I don't count the fuel needed and I am able to grow, distill, and use my own ethanol. Just sayin'...
          • by maynard ( 3337 )

            The question is, can you scale growing your own fuel up to a whole population? If so, maybe it would be more efficient for people to drive Mustangs with their own moonshine fuel than to drive a Prius. Though, that presumes the Prius can't burn the moonshine. Because if it could, then it would once again be more efficient than the Mustang, per unit fuel.

            Regardless, the engineer made a point about efficiency that hasn't been refuted here. Because even considering pure energy efficiency and not cost efficiency

    • I've seen this, and I think the conclusion here is that the guy just made something massively large and hasn't shown a video of the thing actually being saturated.

  • So less than, say, burying it 24 inches or so?
  • A system of small pipes circulating through the metal panel beneath the film

    They invented an air conditioner that works like the internets. Cool.

  • I think the scientists just discovered that things are cooler in the shade.

    • I think the scientists just discovered that things are cooler in the shade.

      This comment just demonstrates you didn't watch the video, it actually gets cooler when taken out of the shade. In shade it can only dump the heat into the shade tree, or whatever is blocking the sun, but out of the shade it can dump heat into the much colder outer space. This is very cool technology, if you pardon the pun. One big problem solar PV panels have is staying cool as the heat reduces efficiency. If they can make this cheap enough then it can reduce the cost per watt of PV cells.

  • by KalvinB ( 205500 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @11:41AM (#59050770) Homepage

    Radiant Barriers have been around for a long time. They may have invented a better version but this has been a thing forever. You can buy the panels at Home Depot. The problem is that in places like southern Arizona, 10-20 degrees isn't going to cut it. They're not a sufficient solution. They can help increase the efficiency of existing A/C systems by reducing the initial amount of heat, but you've still got 10-20 degrees or more to go.

    The cost savings is around 5-10% with existing panels.

    https://www.azcentral.com/stor... [azcentral.com]

    It can take decades to recoup the cost of installation. If it's put in on a new build, it might make sense. But for most people, better insulation is a better idea. It really doesn't matter how hot the attic is if it doesn't come through to the living areas.

  • But in all seriousness, it sounds like they've discovered that...it's cooler in the shade than it is in direct sunlight. I live in the south, and during the summer the prime parking spots aren't near the door, they're under a tree or anything that might provide some shade.

    Maybe I'm missing something?

  • I can't fully understand this system from the summary. But how much cooler is the air under a solar panel vs ambient? How much more efficient would the heat exchanger be if I were to put it under a traditional solar panel. Because if this system isn't more efficient than that, what's the benefit? I'm not saying that this thing isn't great, just that there isn't enough information to make any statements.
  • by Smidge204 ( 605297 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @12:13PM (#59050942) Journal

    All I'm seeing is reference to temperatures; that's not sufficient to do anything with. How much power can these things reject per unit area?

    Say a small single room AC unit can remove about 0.75 tons (9000 BTU/Hr or 2.64KW) of energy from a room. Let's also say it's a really efficient unit with an EER of 12.0 (which is good for such a small unit) meaning the ratio of BTU/Hr moves to energy consumed in watts is 12.0:

    EER = 12.0 = 9000 (BTU/Hr) / Watts --> Watts = 750

    Add that to the 2,640 watts it's removing from the room, and you need to reject 3,390 watts in total to the environment.

    How much radiative cooling can be achieved is difficult to pin down; one source I found [aceee.org] pans out to roughly 100 watts per square meter. Another [aceee.org] estimates 15.9 BTU/Hr per square foot (just 50 watts per square meter).

    So going by the more optimistic 100 w/m^2 we'll "only" need ~340 square meters of panels to keep one small room air conditioned.

    Now maybe their engineered material performs significantly better than the metal roofs cited in those studies. Even if it's ten times better, you still need a radiative surface area roughly double the size of the room it's cooling (based on rule of thumb for sizing domestic AC units). Even if the effectiveness is double that again because you're pushing the heat into it (panels are warm/hot to the touch) you're still on par with floor area.

    This certainly has a place in the grand scheme of things but I'm not holding my breath this will see widespread adoption in the HVAC/refrigeration world.
    =Smidge=

  • The Roman troops occupying Carthage used that method to make "ice cream" (probably really sherbet). But you didn't catch them using that method in Italy.

    That method works well where night skies are clear. It's lousy if it's cloudy. Use it in a desert and it will work well. Other places...not so well. Places that are cloudy or rainy, forget it.

    So it could be a great supplement (or perhaps replacement) for air conditioning in a desert environment, especially is you had a room used as an "ice chest", and

  • moron writing summary put 5 to 10 degree C drop in as absolute C temperatures and converted to F! hahaha

    no, this is for drop of 9/5 of 5 to 10 degrees C....9 to 18 degree F lower.

    Yeah and 18 degree drop is investor marketing spew dream case.

    this thing won't work when its mid 80s or higher... like right now.

  • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @02:05PM (#59051814) Journal

    I have been looking at this technology since about when these guys published. (Was looking for better ways to air condition my house on the Nevada high desert.)

    This is the Stanford team. They came up with the idea and made it work. Their approach uses a nanotech composite pigment - pricey to make initially. (I hope they were able to bring it down.) It does the whole job: radiating sharply in the infrared window, reflecting the rest. They got about 5C drop in sunlight. (I'm guessing it's because they don't cut off soon enough at the top of the IR window and so still soak up a bit of light.)

    It's good to see them getting a product out. They came up with this and deserve rewards, big time.

    Having seen this, some material science guys at U Colorado realized that the stuff was basically a resonator. They were working with micron scale glass beads as resonators. So they came up with their own, cheaper, way to do it.

    They used 8 micron beads - six percent by weight - embedded (randomly, by mixing it into the resin then drawing it into a film) in TPX plastic (an infrared-transparent plastic that is very stable in sunlight - though they say you could do almost as well with other, less durable but common and cheaper, plastics). The result radiates in the window but transmits elsewhere, so they aluminized the back surface.

    Theirs gets 10C temperature drop in direct sunlight. It's easily manufactured in a roll-to-roll process, so it would cost about 50 cents per square meter.

    It gets about 93 watts of heat-dumping per square meter (I haven't seen the numbers on the Stanford guys' stuff but with half the temp drop I'd guess it might be half that. Sticking with the glass beads for now ...) My cheap air conditioner has a COP of a bit over 11, so that's about 8 watts of line electricity per square meter of helper cooling panel on the hot side. So you'd need something like ten square meters of panel to boost a small room air conditioner.

    If you could do this in a paint it would cool the building surface 24/7 (good for hot-all-year climates.) The Stanford pigment would work. The glass beads too, if you did a two-layer paint job. (Though I'd worry about them being an inhalation hazard.)

    Somebody came up with another way to do this in a paint: It's an oil-based paint with water added, mixed so the water forms microspheres when it's applied and curing. After a few days the water evaporates out through the paint, leaving voids that do the same resonant just-the-infrared-window trick. Haven't see how well this works, but it's already commercially available.

    • The glass beads, being transparent at other frequencies and resonating below even the 1130 nm bandgap of silicaon (so they won't absorb anything useful for a solar panel) also have a great potential as a cheap coating on solar panels. Panels work better when they're cooler, so applying them can be profitable by boosting the panel output.

      One thing that had troubled me about solar energy in the "fix global warming' scenario is that solar panels absorb about all that htis them. What doesn't end up as power -

  • Could this be used to fight global warming? Not just by dropping electricity usage, but by radiating more heat back into space? If the material converts heat to a wavelength that isn't absorbed by the atmosphere, how much would it take to counteract the heating caused by CO2?

    With all the scaremongering about how we're all going to die if we don't elect a radical leftist as President, it would seem that painting roofs would be a first step to get the heat out.

    This can't cover the entire Earth. Granted. B

  • A California-based company

    Red flag number 1.

    called SkyCool Systems

    Red flag number 2. The name is generic as fuck but still tries to seem hip.

    is in the early stages

    Red flag number 2. They have nothing to show.

    of manufacturing a cooling system that's more energy efficient than anything humans have used for a century.

    Red flag number 4. They instantly jump to a claim of being revolutionary.

    It's doing it using radiative cooling, a concept that was used in the Middle East and India hundreds of years ago.

    Red flag number 5. They're unlocking the ancient secrets of exotic lands.

    Quartz reports:
    To understand how radiative cooling works, forget for a moment the sun. Think instead about the night sky. Once the sun has set and the cooler evening begins, just about everything on Earth -- the soil, the grass, the roofs of homes, even people -- give off heat. A lot of that heat rises up into the atmosphere where it effectively transmits out into space, never returning to Earth. The night sky is very chilly, and objects sending heat upward at night send up more heat than the whole sky is sending back down.

    Red flag number 6. Taking a basic concept - things cool off at night - and pitching it to moronic investors.

    Hundreds of years ago, long before refrigeration existed, people in India and Iran used this basic concept to make ice in climates with temperatures above freezing. Water was filled into large and shallow ceramic pools that were surrounded and insulated by hay, and then the pools were left out on clear nights.

    Red flag number 7. They're taking that concept and totally misapplying it. Water can freeze in a range of ambient

  • So, do they use this efficient reflector to concentrate the light on a separate solar electric system (heat or photo-voltaic) system, for a double-whammy?

If you have a procedure with 10 parameters, you probably missed some.

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