Scientists have created a new light-emitting cement that could last a hundred years and illuminate roads, highways or bicycle lanes at night by absorbing solar energy during the day.
Currently, the cement exists in blue or green colour, and the light intensity can be regulated to avoid dazzling drivers.
"The main issue was that cement is an opaque body that doesn't allow the pass of light to its interior," said Jose Carlos Rubio, from Michoacan's University of San Nicolas Hidalgo (UMSNH) in Mexico.
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"In that moment it starts to become a gel, similar to the one used for hair styling, but much stronger and resistant; at the same time, some crystal flakes are formed, these are unwanted sub-products in hardened cement," Rubio said.
Due to this, researchers focused on modifying the micro-structure of the cement in order to eliminate crystals and make it completely gel, helping it to absorb solar energy and then return it to the environment as light.
By the morning, the building, road, highway or structure that is made out of this new cement can absorb solar energy and emit it during the night for around 12 hours, researchers said.
Rubio said that most fluorescent materials are made out of plastic and have an average of three years of life span because they decay with UV rays. However, the new cement is sun-resistant and has an estimated lifespan of 100 years.
The material is made out of sand, dust or clay that becomes the gel, and the only residue of its production is water vapour, researchers said.