cm1c01389_si_002.mp4 (26.15 MB)
Automatically Modulated Thermoresponsive Film Based on a Phase-Changing Copolymer
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posted on 2021-09-07, 13:43 authored by Ying Liu, Jiacheng Fan, Roshan Plamthottam, Meng Gao, Zihang Peng, Yuan Meng, Mingfei He, Hanxiang Wu, Yufeng Wang, Tianxi Liu, Chao Zhang, Qibing PeiThermoresponsive materials, in particular
those exhibiting switchable
optical transmittance via temperature change, have been widely used
in different applications. If the required temperature change is within
seasonal temperature changes, the transmittance change would consume
low energy or be autonomous. Here, a solid-state thermoresponsive
phase-changing copolymer (TPCC) film has been demonstrated, with a
large transmittance modulation between room and hot temperatures (>28
°C). The polymer film comprises a hydrophilic poly(hydroxyethyl
acrylate) (HEA) cross-linked with a hydrophobic phase-changing poly(hexadecyl
acrylate-co-tetradecyl acrylate) (HDA-TA). The TPCC
was designed such that the HEA and HDA-TA moieties produce micrometer-scale
phase separation, the HDA-TA moiety undergoes reversible crystalline-to-amorphous
transition at 28–32 °C, and the refractive indices of
the hydrophilic and hydrophobic phases are matched at ambient temperature
but are mismatched when the temperature is above the transition. The
TPCC film showed high modulations of transmittance in the visible
(390–780 nm), solar (300–2500 nm), and infrared (780–2500
nm) spectrum of 68.8, 62.7, and 55.8%, respectively. The opacity switching
was reversible without any decay after 1000 heating–cooling
cycles. The TPCC film was investigated for autonomous and climate-adaptable
solar modulation window application.
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>- tetradecyl acrylatestate thermoresponsive phasescale phase separationrequired temperature changepolymer film compriseslarge transmittance modulation8 %, respectivelyhydrophobic phasewidely usedta ).reversible withoutrefractive indicesopacity switchinghydrophobic phasesdifferent applicationsco changing copolymerambient temperature