Google – AFP, 24 October 2013
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Pedestrians
walk through the financial district of Shanghai on October 16, 2013
(AFP/File,
Peter Parks)
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Paris —
Scientists in China said Thursday they had designed a "smart" window
that can both save and generate energy, and may ultimately reduce heating and
cooling costs for buildings.
While
allowing us to feel close to the outside world, windows cause heat to escape
from buildings in winter and let the Sun's unwanted rays enter in summer.
This has
sparked a quest for "smart" windows that can adapt to weather
conditions outside.
Today's
smart windows are limited to regulating light and heat from the sun, allowing a
lot of potential energy to escape, study co-author Yanfeng Gao of the Chinese
Academy of Sciences told AFP.
"The
main innovation of this work is that it developed a concept smart window device
for simultaneous generation and saving of energy."
Engineers
have long battled to incorporate energy-generating solar cells into window
panes without affecting their transparency.
Gao's team
discovered that a material called vanadium oxide (VO2) can be used as a
transparent coating to regulate infrared radiation from the Sun.
VO2 changes
its properties based on temperature. Below a certain level it is insulating and
lets through infrared light, while at another temperature it becomes
reflective.
A window in
which VO2 was used could regulate the amount of Sun energy entering a building,
but also scatter light to solar cells the team had placed around their glass
panels, where it was used to generate energy with which to light a lamp, for
example.
"This
smart window combines energy-saving and generation in one device, and offers
potential to intelligently regulate and utilise solar radiation in an efficient
manner," the study authors wrote in the journal Nature Scientific Reports.
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