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New window insulation blocks heat, but not your view

Man holds a block filled with clear material in front of his face

Abram Fluckiger, an undergraduate student at CU 海角社区, holds up a block containing five layers of MOCHI material and two panes of glass. (Credit: Glenn Asakawa/CU 海角社区)

Physicists at CU 海角社区 have designed a new material for insulating windows that could improve the energy efficiency of buildings worldwide鈥攁nd it works a bit like a high-tech version of Bubble Wrap.

The team鈥檚 material, called Mesoporous Optically Clear Heat Insulator, or MOCHI, comes in large slabs or thin sheets that can be applied to the inside of any window. So far, the team only makes the material in the lab, and it鈥檚 not available for consumers. But the researchers say MOCHI is long-lasting and is almost completely transparent.

That means it won鈥檛 disrupt your view, unlike many insulating materials on the market today,

鈥淭o block heat exchange, you can put a lot of insulation in your walls, but windows need to be transparent,鈥 said Ivan Smalyukh, senior author of the study and a professor of physics at CU 海角社区. 鈥淔inding insulators that are transparent is really challenging.鈥

He and his colleagues in the journal 鈥淪cience.鈥

Two men hold a large sheet of clear material in between them with mountains visible in the background

Eldho Abraham, left, and Taewoo Lee, right, hold up a thin sheet of MOCHI affixed to clear plastic.(Photo by Glenn J. Asakawa/CU 海角社区)

A woman holds up a piece of paper with a line of clear gels on top of it

Shakshi Bhardwaj holds up blocks of MOCHI in different sizes. (Credit: Glenn Asakawa/CU 海角社区)

A group photo with people holding up clear panes of material

From left to right, Eldho Abraham, Gewei (Gary) Chen, Abram Fluckiger, Taewoo Lee, Keita Richardson, Shiva Singh, Shakshi Bhardwaj, Hanqing Zhao, Ivan Smalyukh, and Alex Adaka. (Credit: Glenn Asakawa/CU 海角社区)

Buildings, from single-family homes to office skyscrapers, consume about 40% of all energy generated worldwide. They also leak, losing heat to the outdoors on cold days and absorbing heat when the temperature rises.

Smalyukh and his colleagues aim to slow down that exchange.

The group鈥檚 MOCHI material is a silicone gel with a twist: The gel traps air through a network of tiny pores that are many times thinner than the width of a human hair. Those tiny air bubbles are so good at blocking heat that you can use a MOCHI sheet just 5 millimeters thick to hold a flame in the palm of your hand.

鈥淣o matter what the temperatures are outside, we want people to be able to have comfortable temperatures inside without having to waste energy,鈥 said Smalyukh, a fellow at the Renewable and Sustainable Energy Institute (RASEI) at CU 海角社区.

Bubble magic

Smalyukh said the secret to MOCHI comes down to precisely controlling those pockets of air.
The team鈥檚 new invention is similar to aerogels, a class of insulating material that is in widespread use today. (NASA uses aerogels inside its Mars rovers to keep electronics warm).

Like MOCHI, aerogels trap countless pockets of air. But those bubbles tend to be distributed randomly throughout aerogels and often reflect light rather than let it pass through. As a result, these materials often look cloudy, which is why they鈥檙e sometimes called 鈥渇rozen smoke.鈥

In the new research, Smalyukh and his colleagues wanted to take a different approach to insulation.

To make MOCHI, the group mixes a special type of molecule known as surfactants into a liquid solution. These molecules natural clump together to form thin threads in a process not unlike how oil and vinegar separate in salad dressing. Next, molecules of silicone in the same solution begin to stick to the outside of those threads.

Through a series of steps, the researchers then replace the clumps of detergent molecules with air. That leaves silicone surrounding a network of incredibly small pipes filled with air, which Smalyukh compares to a 鈥減lumber鈥檚 nightmare.鈥澨

In all, air makes up more than 90% of the volume of the MOCHI material.

Trapping heat

Smalyukh said that heat passes through a gas in a process something like a game of pool: Heat energizes molecules and atoms in the gas, which then bang into other molecules and atoms, transferring the energy.

The bubbles in MOCHI material are so small, however, that the gases inside can鈥檛 bang into each other, effectively keeping heat from flowing through.

鈥淭he molecules don鈥檛 have a chance to collide freely with each other and exchange energy,鈥 Smalyukh said. 鈥淚nstead, they bump into the walls of the pores.鈥

At the same time, the MOCHI material only reflects about .2% of incoming light.

The researchers see a lot of uses for this clear-but-insulating material. Engineers could design a device that uses MOCHI to trap the heat from sunlight, converting it into cheap and sustainable energy.

鈥淓ven when it鈥檚 a somewhat cloudy day, you could still harness a lot of energy and then use it to heat your water and your building interior,鈥 Smalyukh said.

You probably won鈥檛 see these products on the market soon. Currently, the team relies on a time-intensive process to produce MOCHI in the lab. But Smalyukh believes the manufacturing process can be streamlined. The ingredients his team uses to make MOCHI are also relatively inexpensive, which the physicist said bodes well for turning this material into a commercial product. 听

For now, the future for MOCHI, like the view through a window coated in this insulating material, looks bright.


Co-authors of the new study include Amit Bhardwaj, Blaise Fleury, Eldo Abraham and Taewoo Lee, postdoctoral research associates in the Department of Physics at CU 海角社区. Bohdan Senyuk, Jan Bart ten Hove and Vladyslav Cherpak, former postdoctoral researchers at CU 海角社区, also served as co-authors.