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Transparent wood that stores, releases heat developed

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Press Trust of India London

Scientists have developed a new kind of transparent wood that not only transmits light, but also absorbs and releases heat, an advance that may help save on energy costs.

The material can bear heavy loads and is biodegradable, paving the way for its use in eco-friendly homes and other buildings.

"Back in 2016, we showed that transparent wood has excellent thermal-insulating properties compared with glass, combined with high optical transmittance," said Celine Montanari, a PhD student at KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden.

"In this work, we tried to reduce the building energy consumption even more by incorporating a material that can absorb, store and release heat," Montanari said in a statement.

 

As economic development progresses worldwide, energy consumption has soared. Much of this energy is used to light, heat and cool homes, offices and other buildings.

Glass windows can transmit light, helping to brighten and heat homes, but they don't store energy for use when the sun goes down.

Three years ago, lead investigator Lars Berglund and colleagues reported an optically transparent wood in the journal Biomacromolecules.

The researchers made the material by removing a light-absorbing component called lignin from the cell walls of balsa wood.

To reduce light scattering, they incorporated acrylic into the porous wood scaffold.

The team could see through the material, yet it was hazy enough to provide privacy if used as a major building material.

The transparent wood also had favourable mechanical properties, enabling it to bear heavy loads.

Building on this work, the researchers added a polymer called polyethylene glycol (PEG) to the de-lignified wood.

"We chose PEG because of its ability to store heat, but also because of its high affinity for wood," Montanari said.

Known as a "phase-change material," PEG is a solid that melts at a temperature of 26 degrees Celsius, storing energy in the process, researchers said.

The melting temperature can be adjusted by using different types of PEGs, they said.

"During a sunny day, the material will absorb heat before it reaches the indoor space, and the indoors will be cooler than outside," Montanari said.

"And at night, the reverse occurs -- the PEG becomes solid and releases heat indoors so that you can maintain a constant temperature in the house," he said.

The researchers encapsulated PEG within the de-lignified wood scaffold, which prevented leakage of the polymer during phase transitions.

They also incorporated acrylic into the material to protect it from humidity.

Like their earlier version, the modified wood was transparent, though slightly hazy, and strong, but had the added bonus of storing heat.

The researchers point out that the transparent wood has the potential to be more environmentally friendly than other building materials such as plastic, concrete and glass.

In addition to its thermal-storage capabilities, the transparent wood could be easier to dispose of after it has served its purpose.

"The PEG and wood are both bio-based and biodegradable. The only part that is not biodegradable is the acrylic, but this could be replaced by another bio-based polymer," Berglund said.

Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content

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First Published: Apr 03 2019 | 5:45 PM IST

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