New ultra-violet and near-infrared blocking filters for energy saving applications: fabrication of tantalum metal atom cluster-based nanocomposite thin films by electrophoretic deposition
Author(s) -
Thi Kim Ngân Nguyên,
Adèle Renaud,
Maxence Wilmet,
Noée Dumait,
Serge Paofai,
Benjamin Dierre,
Wanghui Chen,
Naoki Ohashi,
Stéphane Cordier,
Fabien Grasset,
Tetsuo Uchikoshi
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of materials chemistry c
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.899
H-Index - 128
eISSN - 2050-7534
pISSN - 2050-7526
DOI - 10.1039/c7tc02454a
Subject(s) - materials science , fabrication , nanocomposite , tantalum , electrophoretic deposition , coating , deposition (geology) , nanotechnology , chemical engineering , atomic layer deposition , metal , infrared , thin film , optoelectronics , metallurgy , optics , medicine , paleontology , alternative medicine , physics , pathology , sediment , biology , engineering
International audienceThis study reports the first integration of inorganic tantalum octahedral metal atom clusters into multifunctional nanocomposite coating materials and devices for window technology and energy saving applications. [Ta6Br12i](n+) (n = 2, 3 or 4) cluster-based high visible transparency UV and NIR filters are realized. Green and brown colored films are fabricated by coating on an indium-doped tin oxide glass substrate by electrophoretic deposition, an industrialized solution process. The efficiency in energy saving of the new UV-NIR filters was estimated by the determination of different figure of merit (FOM) values, such as Tvis, Tsol and Tvis/Tsol (Tsol = solar transmittance and Tvis = visible transmittance), and the color coordinates (x, y, z and L*a*b). The Tvis/Tsol ratio is equal to 1.25 for the best films. Such values are evidence of a higher energy saving efficiency than most of the inorganic composites reported in the literature. These promising results pave the way for the use of transition metal clusters as a new class of nanocoatings in energy saving window-based applications
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