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Color-changing roof tiles can absorb, reflect heat with the seasons

By | October 12, 2009, 8:57 AM PDT

MIT researchers have developed roof tiles that change color based on the temperature, turning white when it’s hot to deflect heat and turning black when it’s cold to absorb it.

According to the team’s lab measurements, the tiles can reflect about 80 percent of sunlight when they’re white and 30 percent of sunlight when they’re black. In their white state, the tiles could save as much as 20 percent of present cooling costs, according to the researchers.

That’s a smart move. U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu has urged Americans switch to white roofs to curb global warming and eliminate greenhouse gas emissions — as much in 20 years as the entire world produces in a year.

Tellingly, officials in cities north of Washington, D.C. say the tradeoff isn’t worth it for them.

The MIT tiles aim to please both sides.

The team introduced the tiles at the Making and Designing Materials Engineering Contest for MIT students and earned $5,000 for their efforts.

According to team member Nick Orf, the researchers originally tried to develop a color-shifting roof tile using a system of mixed fluids, one dark and one light, whose density would change with temperature (the dark fluid would float to the top when it was cold, and the white fluid would surface when it was hot).

Proving too complicated, that system was exchanged for one made of a common commercial polymer in a water solution. That solution is encapsulated between flexible plastic layers, with a dark layer at the back. When the temperature is above a certain level — the number depending on how the solution’s formula is tailored — the polymer condenses to form tiny droplets, whose small sizes produce a white surface and scatter light.

Below that temperature, the polymer stays dissolved, revealing the tile’s black backing and absorbing the sun’s heat.

The researchers are now working on a more inexpensive version that can be retrofit to houses with existing black roofs. That version containes micro-encapsulated polymer solution that’s mixed with a clear paint material that could be brushed or sprayed onto an existing surface.

The team has yet to commercialize the product. The next step? Testing its durability in the elements.

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Andrew Nusca

About Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca is the editor of SmartPlanet.

Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca

Editor

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet and an associate editor for ZDNet. Previously, he worked at Money, Men's Vogue and Popular Mechanics magazines. He holds degrees from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and New York University. He based in New York but resides in Philadelphia.

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Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca
Andrew Nusca does not hold any investments in the companies he covers.
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+1 Vote
+ -
RE: Color-changing roof tiles can absorb, reflect heat with the seasons
White roofs and cool roof technology performed remarkably when we
completed several thousand hours of advanced infrared to see how the
roofs were reflecting or absorbing the sun's rays. These tiles have
the potential to save on emissions but there is a very real concern.

There isn't a time when you want tiles to be absorbent on the outside
of the building because you will create urban heat islands and change
weather. The walls of the buildings should be white, shaded or
protected from solar radiation as well.

Buildings are designed and insulated for very specific temperatures
and absorbent finishes on the exterior can compromise that. Here is a
link to a youtube video we completed to show how absorbent finishes
contribute to urban heat islands and climate change. Watch the trees
from neighbors protecting buildings across roads.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1EmBQcXr6ng
Posted by Thermoguy
13th Oct 2009
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: Color-changing roof tiles can absorb, reflect heat with the seasons
This is thinking outside of the box that has real possibilities.

Posted by rbrooks802
13th Oct 2009
+1 Vote
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RE: Color-changing roof tiles can absorb, reflect heat with the seasons
I also like the idea of polymer based photovoltaic cells printed on the same presses that Australian currency currently uses for producing a roof filled with photovoltaics. I believe that the efficiency is now fairly poor, but improving,but the cost is low. The idea being presumably to produce electricity producing roof tops that can be marketed much the same way and for much the same cost that colourbond roof sheeting is currently produced for.
Posted by rolandallbrook
13th Oct 2009
+1 Vote
+ -
How does it know?
If it absorbs heat when it's cold outside, how does it know it's still cold outside? Dark (infrared-absorbing) surfaces can take in a lot of heat, even when the ambient temperature is significantly lower - like asphalt melting snow on a sunny mid-January day. Sounds a bit self-defeating to me. If end-user costs are inexpensive enough and the product is durable, it will make the decision easy, but if it will be expensive to buy, it sounds like a tough sell to me.

Did these guys test conventional thermochromics; surely there must be a thermal analog to electrocromics?

Clever idea.
Posted by Suncat2000
13th Oct 2009
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: Color-changing roof tiles can absorb, reflect heat with the seasons
Suncat2000 brings up important questions. Solar radiation is 365 days
a year regardless of season. We completed several thousand hours,
several years and seasons to document solar interaction with
buildings as well as development. The information contradicted our
own professional education in the calculator but the accuracy of the
data couldn't be ignored. When the sun comes up it hits the walls
first and impacts the entire building throughout the day.

In July when it was 92 degrees F outside and in the afternoon, we
documents the walls of buildings as high as 198 degree F because of
solar radiation.(not good for a building insulated for a max of 92
degrees F) In February of this year on a 32 degree F day in Canada,
there was snow on the roof but the dark exterior walls were 170
degrees F.

For education only we completed several time-lapsed infrared videos
and there are 3 of them for you to view at the link provided. The 3rd
video shows the impact of solar radiation on the inside of the
building. Right after that there is an image of a radiated cutblock
in the winter. www.thermoguy.com/urbanheat.html
Posted by Thermoguy
14th Oct 2009
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: Color-changing roof tiles can absorb, reflect heat with the seasons
re how does it know, you couple it with a heat exchanger (think forced air or flowing water) which is then used to heat the inside of the building.

the problem is in the present form its just a gimick and it needs proper thought in order to make it a viable piece of technology.
Posted by nanotm01
14th Oct 2009
+1 Vote
+ -
Thanks for working on this
Thanks for working on this. The model I made in the 1970s using digital chemical thermometers was rudimentry, as it varied too many colors at various temperatures. This can be incorporated as granules on shingles or as paint pigments.
Posted by [[[```RPB
14th Oct 2009
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: Color-changing roof tiles can absorb, reflect heat with the seasons
The problem I had with paint pigments changing colors was "perceived buyer resistance" to telling freinds directions to their house ... "It's the light blue house on the right, unless it's between 70 and 80 degrees, in which case it's yellow, except in Winter it'll be dark green" ... keep up the work guys happy
Posted by [[[```RPB
14th Oct 2009
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: Color-changing roof tiles can absorb, reflect heat with the seasons
This is a great idea but another company has already thought of it. Check out movingcolor.net.
Posted by Gundar67
31st Oct 2009
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: Color-changing roof tiles can absorb, reflect heat with the seasons
This is a great idea but another company has already thought of the idea. Check them out at movingcolor.net.
Posted by Gundar67
31st Oct 2009
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: Color-changing roof tiles can absorb, reflect heat with the seasons
This is a great idea but another company has already thought of it. Check them out at movingcolor.net.
Posted by Gundar67
31st Oct 2009
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