Realizing optimal radiative cooling walls in building-energy nexus via asymmetric emissivity

Elsevier, Nexus, Volume 1, Issue 3, September 2024
Authors: 
Qilong Cheng, Sebastian Gomez, Guanzhong Hu, Albatool Abaalkhail, Jazmyn E. Beasley, Peter Zhang, Yuan Xu, Xiaohan Chen, Steven Tian, Jyotirmoy Mandal, Aaswath P. Raman, Nanfang Yu, Yuan Yang

With the gradually warming climate, the global cooling demand for buildings is rapidly increasing. Radiative cooling (RC) has been an attractive electricity-free approach to reducing the energy consumption of buildings. Current RC strategies focus on roofs; however, limited attention has been paid to vertical walls. Here, we report a zigzag-based structural design with asymmetric emissivity to realize optimal RC walls. Such asymmetry leads to a daily average temperature drop of 2.3°C compared to conventional walls coated with RC materials. When the ground is at ∼56°C, the temperature drop reaches 3.1°C, corresponding to a relative cooling power of 67 W m−2 compared to the control wall. Moreover, the energy impact of this zigzag wall in diverse climate conditions is analyzed based on building-scale simulations. Current limitations and future improvement directions are also discussed. This zigzag RC wall provides a new passive solution to energy-efficient buildings.