An alternative nighttime radiative cooling paint using glass microspheres in water-based acrylic paint
Journal article
Authors/Editors
Strategic Research Themes
Publication Details
Author list: Huttakorn Wanichart, Jatuphorn Wootthikanokkhan, Chumphon Luangchaisri
Publication year: 2023
Volume number: 15
Issue number: 3
Start page: 251830
eISSN: 2821-9996
URL: https://ph01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/snru_journal/article/view/251830
Languages: English-United States (EN-US)
Abstract
An alternative method for producing radiative cooling paint using sustainable and cost-effective green materials, whichcan significantly reduce indoor temperatures. Prior research on radiative cooling systems
revealed that multilayer metal oxide systems require expensive raw materials and high-end facilities, limiting large-scale production. Therefore, this study aimed to identify optimal conditions for producing radiative cooling paint using commercial spherical glass microspheres and titanium dioxide nanoparticles. The study investigated the effect of glass microsphere size, quantity, and coating thickness on emissivity and light reflectance. Results showed that glass microsphere size did not significantly affect emissivity. However, increasing coating thickness and glass microsphere quantity initially increased emissivity but stabilized at
saturation points. The addition of glass microspheres decreased light reflectance, increasing temperatures during the daytime. The radiative cooling efficiency of the paint was tested, and the results showed that the glass microsphere content significantly affected the reduction in daytime temperatures. A mixture content of 45 and 75 wt% reduced the temperature by 2.96 and 3.09 °C, respectively, lower than the ambient temperature during the nighttime. The double layer of titanium dioxide/glass microspheres paint was more effective at cooling than the single layer of 45% glass microspheres, despite similar emissivity values.
Keywords
glass microsphere, radiative cooling, Water-base acrylic paint