Advanced Sustainable Systems
Full Paper

Nanofluid Based on Glucose‐Derived Carbon Dots Functionalized with [Bmim]Cl for the Next Generation of Smart Windows

Helena M. R. Gonçalves

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: helenardrgs@gmail.com

Chemistry Department and CQ‐VR, University of Trás‐os‐Montes e Alto Douro, 5001‐801 Vila Real, Portugal

REQUIMTE, Instituto Superior de Engenharia do Porto, 4200‐072 Porto, Portugal

E‐mail:

helenardrgs@gmail.com

,

vbermude@utad.pt

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Rui F. P. Pereira

Chemistry Department and Chemistry Centre, University of Minho, 4710‐057 Braga, Portugal

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Emmanuel Lepleux

CSInstruments (CSI‐AFM France), 91940 Les Ulis, France

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Thomas Carlier

CSInstruments (CSI‐AFM France), 91940 Les Ulis, France

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Louis Pacheco

CSInstruments (CSI‐AFM France), 91940 Les Ulis, France

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Sónia Pereira

CENIMAT/I3N, Departamento de Ciência dos Materiais, Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia, Universidade NOVA de Lisboa, 2829‐516 Lisboa, Portugal

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Artur J. M. Valente

CQC, Chemistry Department, University of Coimbra, 3004‐535 Coimbra, Portugal

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Elvira Fortunato

CENIMAT/I3N, Departamento de Ciência dos Materiais, Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia, Universidade NOVA de Lisboa, 2829‐516 Lisboa, Portugal

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Abel J. Duarte

REQUIMTE, Instituto Superior de Engenharia do Porto, 4200‐072 Porto, Portugal

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Verónica de Zea Bermudez

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: vbermude@utad.pt

Chemistry Department and CQ‐VR, University of Trás‐os‐Montes e Alto Douro, 5001‐801 Vila Real, Portugal

E‐mail:

helenardrgs@gmail.com

,

vbermude@utad.pt

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First published: 07 June 2019
Citations: 1
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Abstract

The design of new advanced materials and technologies is essential for the development of smart windows for the next generation of energy‐efficient buildings. Here, it is demonstrated that the functionalization of glucose‐derived carbon dots with 1‐butyl‐3‐methylimidazolium chloride results in a self‐standing, water‐soluble, viscous, reusable nanofluid with self‐improving conductivity, thermotropy around 30–40 °C, and ultraviolet blocking ability. Its synthesis is straightforward, clean, fast, and cheap. At 36 °C (hot summer day), a sun‐actuated thermotropic (TT) device incorporating a 95% w/w nanofluid aqueous solution exhibits a transmittance variation (ΔT) of 9% at 550/1000 nm, which is amplified to 47/31% via the surface plasmon resonance effect. An integrated self‐healing system enabling independent sun‐actuated TT and voltage‐actuated electrochromic (EC) operation is also produced. The low‐energy EC device offers bright hot and dark cold modes (ΔT = 68/64%), excellent cycling stability, unprecedented coloration efficiency values (−1.73 × 106/−1.67 × 106 cm2 C−1 (coloring) and +1.12 × 107/+1.08 × 107 cm2 C−1 (bleaching) at ±2.5 V), and impressive memory effect. The disruptive design and sustainable synthesis of the new nanofluid proposed here will foster the agile development of novel products with improved ecological footprint.

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