image: Electrochromic smart windows block thermal radiation, or heat, from entering buildings and save energy associated with cooling buildings on hot days. view more
Credit: Image courtesy of Steven Marquez (Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO).
A study suggests an approach to speed up the transition of smart glass windows from clear to tinted. Smart windows transition between transparent and tinted states by using small voltages to drive ions into or out of transparent tungsten oxide thin films. Although smart glass offers numerous advantages related to energy consumption and human comfort, the technology is currently hampered by slow tinting rates, around 7-12 minutes. Justin B. Sambour and colleagues demonstrate the use of single-particle resolution optical imaging to measure structure-function relationships in tungsten oxide nanorods, a nanomaterial with properties that can potentially enable rapid tinting. The authors show that single nanorods undergo a particle-dependent delay prior to tinting, an initial waiting period required to insert lithium ions at optically inactive surface sites. Further, the delay contributes to the inefficiency of nanoparticle films and a nonuniform tinting appearance that spreads in space and time as particles switch one-by-one. The study also reveals that interfaces between particles act as ion traps that gradually degrade the optical performance of the material. Based on these measurements and additional findings showing that single particles tint up to four times faster and cycle more reliably than films, the authors present a thin film architecture. The thin film is designed to exploit fast-switching electrochromic nanoparticles and avoid detrimental particle-to-particle interactions, according to the authors.
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Article #18-22007: "Influence of single-nanoparticle electrochromic dynamics on the durability and speed of smart windows," by R. Evans, Austin Ellingworth, Christina Cashen, C. Weinberger, and Justin B. Sambur.
MEDIA CONTACT: Justin B. Sambur, Department of Chemistry, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO; tel: 970-420-4279; e-mail: jsambur@colostate.edu
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences