Titania-Based Coral-Structured Solar Absorber Coating with Improved Scalability and Durability at High Temperature

Yifan Guo, Kaoru Tsuda, Milad Mohsenzadeh, Sahar Hosseini, Yasushi Murakami, Joe Coventry, Juan F. Torres*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Solar energy harvesting and storage are essential in the future mix of renewable energy technologies. Hierarchical coral-structured coatings have been shown to yield high solar absorptance in concentrating solar thermal (CST) systems. However, interfacial delamination and scalability challenges owing to material complexity pose significant hurdles for the widespread industrial adoption of these hierarchical CST coatings. Here, a coral-structured coating is proposed whose black pigments are strongly bonded by titania, which is a material that mitigates interfacial delamination. Importantly, this coating follows a facile deposition procedure suitable for large-scale solar receivers. The drone-deposited coating inhibits cation diffusion and maintains a stable solar absorptance of (Formula presented.) even after long-term (3000 h) high-temperature ((Formula presented.)) aging. The scalability of developed coating represents a substantial advancement in the implementation of light-trapping enhancement and maintenance approaches across a wide range of CST applications.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2407409
JournalAdvanced Science
Volume11
Issue number42
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13 Nov 2024

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