Volltext-Downloads (blau) und Frontdoor-Views (grau)
  • search hit 4 of 31
Back to Result List

Transparent sol-gel-based coatings reflecting heat radiation in the near infrared

  • Thin, flat textile roofing offers negligible heat insulation. In warm areas, such roofing membranes are therefore equipped with metallized surfaces to reflect solar heat radiation, thus reducing the warming inside a textile building. Heat reflection effects achieved by metallic coatings are always accompanied by shading effects as the metals are non-transparent for visible light (VIS). Transparent conductive oxides (TCOs) are transparent for VIS and are able to reflect heat radiation in the infrared. TCOs are, e.g., widely used in the display industry. To achieve the perfect coatings needed for electronic devices, these are commonly applied using costly vacuum processes at high temperatures. Vacuum processes, on account of the high costs involved and high processing temperatures, are obstructive for an application involving textiles. Accepting that heat-reflecting textile membranes demand less perfect coatings, a wet chemical approach has been followed here when producing transparent heat-reflecting coatings. Commercially available TCOs were employed as colloidal dispersions or nanopowders to prepare sol-gel-based coating systems. Such coatings were applied to textile membranes as used for architectural textiles using simple coating techniques and at moderate curing temperatures not exceeding 130 °C. The coatings achieved about 90% transmission in the VIS spectrum and reduced near-infrared transmission (at about 2.5 µm) to nearly zero while reflecting up to 25% of that radiation. Up to 35% reflection has been realized in the far infrared, and emissivity values down to ε = 0.5777 have been measured.

Download full text files

Export metadata

Additional Services

Search Google Scholar

Statistics

frontdoor_oas
Metadaten
Author of HS ReutlingenTextor, Torsten
URN:urn:nbn:de:bsz:rt2-opus4-45875
DOI:https://doi.org/10.3390/gels9100795
ISSN:2310-2861
Erschienen in:Gels
Publisher:MDPI
Place of publication:Basel
Document Type:Journal article
Language:English
Publication year:2023
Tag:architectural textiles; heat reflection; low-e; sol-gel technique; textile roofing
Volume:9
Issue:10
Page Number:18
First Page:1
Last Page:18
Article Number:795
DDC classes:540 Chemie
Open access?:Ja
Licence (German):License Logo  Creative Commons - CC BY - Namensnennung 4.0 International