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Passive passenger compartment cooling
I’m very interested in maximizing passive cabin cooling, both at rest and in motion. Here is a list I’ve come up with, along with some thoughts on each item. This list assumes a near-worst case scenario. Imagine the vehicle sitting in the hot Arizona sun.
I’d like to add that stationary passive cooling is very important, it extends the lifespan of your car interior, and also improves interior conditions when you get in the car. For something with no A/C, any passive improvement is very valuable, and even with A/C, a passively cooled vehicle reduces cooling requirements, maximizing MPG and/or power on hot days. So—any other ideas? |
https://ecomodder.com/forum/member-f...7-100-1040.jpg
Safari windows front and rear, pop-outs and an oversized swamp cooler. |
Probably not easy to impliment yet, but scientists have discovered that just as colored paints reflect certain wavelengths of light and reflect others, one that reflects visible and ultraviolet light, yet is dark and absortive in the infrared spectrum, can maintain a temperature below ambient air temperatures by several degrees. Add a dark roof, perhaps no liner at all, just this material on the roof, and you have an interior passive cooling system.
The way it works is that the hotter something is, the higher the wavelenghts it gives off (get something hot and it starts to glow in the visible spectrum, first red, then yellow, then eventually blue or even violet until it starts producing ultraviolet). At around ambient temperatures, however things usually give off infrared radiation, which cools it. The problem is that this mainly applies to non-reflective surfaces (infrared guns have a hard or impossible time telling the temperature of a reflective surface). But the dilema is that by making something non-reflective in infrared, it usually gives off infrared, but if it's also non-reflective in visible and ultraviolet light, it then absorbs those. And if it's reflective in visible and ultraviolet, like your "cool white roof" it also will not shed heat in infrared. So the key is to make it non-reflective and dark in infrared, but reflective or white in visible and ultraviolet. |
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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmospheric_window Quote:
Given the fabrication process it might be difficult to embody as a paint, but hypershift pearls suggest otherwise. |
Here's a design that reflects solar light yet also radiates heat into space in the same time.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WSTNLvvD_-U |
Nor sure why they call it passive, when there're pumps and circulating fluids. At 5:36 he asserts it's not a heat pump. Because the condenser is a plate radiator?
Compare the claim of 95% efficiency with the 99.6% of nano-scale aluminum foam. Not sure how the diffusion reaction process compares to roll-to-roll thin films for manufacturability. Cars might have white hexagonal tile roofs? Maybe dragon scale vortex generators, like shark skin. |
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The same thing with the panels. The idea is to move the heat towards the panels from around the inside of a building and also to have a way to control it (you probably don't want a chilling effect during the middle of winter). But if temperature control weren't a requirement, then you could just put this material on the roof as the roofing material, so to speak. The bottom line is that it radiates more heat than it assorbs, making it cooler than ambient temperature by as much as 15 degrees. Most materials don't do that, most either assorb a lot of heat from the light from the Sun or they reflect most of that heat without being able to radiate heat. It's like the valve covers on a VW air-cooled engine. Black valve covers are usually preffered because black tends to radiate more heat (infrared). But reportedly VW would sell air-cooled engines with chrome valve covers in artic areas to help hold heat in. But this material both reflects and radiates at the same time. It would be nice if they could design a material like this for engines so we could have nice chrome looking engines that also radiate heat as if they were painted black. |
One thing I've thought about is dash cooling. Run waterlines right under the dash and then up to a radiator with a fan, but could be powered by a small solar panel. It just seems to me that the dash is one of the main places that heat gets into the car (roof can be white or covered in aluminum foil or chrome or something like that). You could have a reflective dash, but that would be hard to see as it would reflect onto the windshield. Hence, why adding cooling to the dash makes sense to me, that way less heat will get into the car.
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