Atomistic metrics of BaSO$_4$ as an ultra-efficient radiative cooling material: a first-principles prediction


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Radiative cooling has recently revived due to its significant potential as an environmentally friendly cooling technology. However, the design of particle-matrix cooling nanocomposites was generally carried out via tedious trial-and-error approaches, and the atomistic physics for efficient radiative cooling was not well understood. In this work, we identify the atomistic metrics of Barium Sulfate (BaSO$_4$) nanocomposite, which is an ultra-efficient radiative cooling material, using a predictive first-principles approach coupled with Monte Carlo simulations. Our results show that BaSO$_4$-acrylic nanocomposites not only attain high total solar reflectance of 92.5% (0.28 - 4.0 um), but also simultaneously demonstrate high normal emittance of 96.0% in the sky window region (8 - 13 um), outperforming the commonly used $alpha$-quartz ($alpha$-SiO$_2$). We identify two pertinent characters of ultra-efficient radiative cooling paints: i) a balanced band gap and refractive index, which enables strong scattering while negating absorption in the solar spectrum, and ii) a sufficient number of infrared-active optical resonance phonon modes resulting in abundant Reststrahlen bands and high emissivity in the sky window. The first principles approach and the resulted physical insights in this work pave the way for further search of ultra-efficient radiative cooling materials.

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