TY - JOUR
T1 - Hybrid vanadium dioxide-liquid crystal tunable non-reciprocal scattering metamaterial smart window for visible and infrared radiation control
AU - Madhuri, P. Lakshmi
AU - Bhupathi, Saranya
AU - Shuddhodana,
AU - Judeh, Zaher M.A.
AU - Yang, Sheng Hsiung
AU - Yi, Long
AU - Abdulhalim, Ibrahim
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement
PY - 2021/9/1
Y1 - 2021/9/1
N2 - Smart windows based on VO2 can control the infrared radiation entering the building based on the temperature, however, the visible part of the spectrum is not controlled. Liquid crystal (LC) based privacy windows, on the other hand, control the visibility either with temperature or applied voltage, however, the total transparency remains fixed as the scattering is mainly in the forward direction. To be able to control both the visibility and the temperature in the house, here we combine both layers in which the LC layer is made of a composite of nanoporous organic microparticles called Cochleates at small concentrations embedded in the LC matrix, thus acting as a tunable scattering metamaterial. The VO2-LC interface has less Fresnel reflectivity and therefore higher solar modulation is expected in an optimized window. In addition, being hidden under the LC layer, VO2 will be protected from oxidation. Electro-optic and thermo-optic properties of the device are investigated including the response time measurements. A non-reciprocity effect is observed showing better performance when the VO2 layer is facing the outside world, in which the window becomes more transparent from inside than from outside and also showing higher solar modulation. Response time is 1 ms for the rise and 10 ms fall time at 70 V. This approach opens up a new possibility of thermochromic VO2 and LC-based systems to satisfy the real-life requirements on smart window applications.
AB - Smart windows based on VO2 can control the infrared radiation entering the building based on the temperature, however, the visible part of the spectrum is not controlled. Liquid crystal (LC) based privacy windows, on the other hand, control the visibility either with temperature or applied voltage, however, the total transparency remains fixed as the scattering is mainly in the forward direction. To be able to control both the visibility and the temperature in the house, here we combine both layers in which the LC layer is made of a composite of nanoporous organic microparticles called Cochleates at small concentrations embedded in the LC matrix, thus acting as a tunable scattering metamaterial. The VO2-LC interface has less Fresnel reflectivity and therefore higher solar modulation is expected in an optimized window. In addition, being hidden under the LC layer, VO2 will be protected from oxidation. Electro-optic and thermo-optic properties of the device are investigated including the response time measurements. A non-reciprocity effect is observed showing better performance when the VO2 layer is facing the outside world, in which the window becomes more transparent from inside than from outside and also showing higher solar modulation. Response time is 1 ms for the rise and 10 ms fall time at 70 V. This approach opens up a new possibility of thermochromic VO2 and LC-based systems to satisfy the real-life requirements on smart window applications.
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U2 - 10.1364/OME.432784
DO - 10.1364/OME.432784
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85113583628
SN - 2159-3930
VL - 11
JO - Optical Materials Express
JF - Optical Materials Express
IS - 9
ER -