Radiative human body cooling by nanoporous polyethylene textile

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Abstract

Thermal management through personal heating and cooling is a strategy by which to expand indoor temperature setpoint range for large energy saving. We show that nanoporous polyethylene (nanoPE) is transparent to mid-infrared human body radiation but opaque to visible light because of the pore size distribution (50 to 1000 nanometers). We processed the material to develop a textile that promotes effective radiative cooling while still having sufficient air permeability, water-wicking rate, and mechanical strength for wearability. We developed a device to simulate skin temperature that shows temperatures 2.7° and 2.0°C lower when covered with nanoPE cloth and with processed nanoPE cloth, respectively, than when covered with cotton. Our processed nanoPE is an effective and scalable textile for personal thermal management.

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Hsu, P. C., Song, A. Y., Catrysse, P. B., Liu, C., Peng, Y., Xie, J., … Cui, Y. (2016). Radiative human body cooling by nanoporous polyethylene textile. Science, 353(6303), 1019–1023. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aaf5471

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