image: This is a photograph of a male longicorn beetle Neocerambyx gigas. view more
Credit: Image credit: Haiwen Zhang.
Researchers report that a photonic film, composed of a micropyramid polymer matrix with ceramic particles and inspired by fluffs on the longicorn beetle that help the beetle regulate its temperature, can reflect 95% of incoming solar radiation and emit infrared energy to achieve up to 5.1° C of passive radiative cooling in direct sunlight.
Article #20-01802: "Biologically inspired flexible photonic films for efficient passive radiative cooling," by Haiwen Zhang et al.
MEDIA CONTACT: Tongxiang Fan, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, CHINA; e-mail: txfan@sjtu.edu.cn; Han Zhou, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, CHINA; e-mail: hanzhou_81@sjtu.edu.cn
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Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences