From The Guardian
Australian scientists have developed roof coatings that can passively cool surfaces up to 6C [11 F] below ambient temperature, as well as extract water from the atmosphere, which they say could reduce indoor temperatures during extreme heat events.
Heatwaves are becoming more intense, more frequent and more deadly due to human-caused global heating.
One coating made from a porous film, which can be painted on to existing roofs, works by reflecting 96% of incoming solar radiation, rather than absorbing [it]. It also has a high thermal emittance, meaning it effectively dissipates heat to outer space when the sky is clear. Its properties are known as passive radiative cooling.
“The paint, even during the day when the sun is out, can be cooler than the air around it,” said the study’s lead author, Prof Chiara Neto of the University of Sydney.
The coolness of the painted surface also means that vapour from the atmosphere readily condenses on its surface – similar to dew forming overnight on a car.
“This material is able to extend the period over which dew can form by at least a couple of hours,” Neto said. “Instead of having dew forming only … say, four to six hours on a good night, you can extend that to eight or 10 hours.”
| Diagram showing how water is captured. Photograph: Chiara Neto/University of Sydney |
In a study, published in the journal Advanced Functional Materials, the researchers tested a prototype for six months on the roof of the Sydney Nanoscience Hub, pairing the cool paint with a UV-resistant topcoat that encouraged dew droplets to roll down into a receptacle.
As much as 390 millilitres per sq metre per day could be collected for about a third of the year, the scientists found. Based on that water capture rate, an average Australian roof – about 200 sq metres – could provide up to 70 litres on days favourable for collecting dew, they estimate.
“It would complement existing provisions of water, whether that be the grid or rainwater,” Neto said, suggesting the system could be used in buildings in remote locations, or where there was little access to groundwater.
“The cooling aspect and the water go hand in hand when we talk about impact,” she said.
In well-insulated buildings, a 6C decrease in roof temperature “might result in a smaller fraction of that cooling being reflected in the top level of the house”, Neto said, but greater temperature reductions would be expected in most Australian houses, “where insulation is quite poor”.
She said the coating could also help reduce the urban heat island effect, in which hard surfaces absorb more heat than natural surfaces, resulting in urban centres being 1C to 13C warmer than rural areas.
The prototype coating studied in the paper was comprised of poly(vinylidene fluoride-co-hexafluoropropene), which is used in the building industry but was “not a scalable technology going forward”, Neto said, because of environmental issues with perfluorinated materials.
However, the researchers are now commercialising a water-based paint with similar properties, which they say is suitable for wide use. Neto said the paint would cost about the same as standard premium paints.
Most Ozzie roofs are dark, even black, which in a hot country seems quite dotty, especially since attic insulation is usually feeble. This means that the temperature in your roof space can be 15 C higher than the air outside. On hot, sunny days, this makes it difficult to cool your house.
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