I’m thrilled to share with you that I joined Princeton University as Gerhard R. Andlinger Visiting Fellow! 🎓✨ At the Andlinger Center, I’ll research combining #RadiativeCooling with #Photovoltaics to boost solar panel performance.

I'm excited to connect with fellow scholars and students—let’s grab a coffee if you’re around! 🤓☕

Huge thanks to everyone who supported me over the past 20 years. Your belief means the world to me. 🙌

https://acee.princeton.edu/gerhard-r-andlinger-visiting-fellows-in-energy-and-the-environment#jager

Gerhard R. Andlinger Visiting Fellows in Energy and the Environment

Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment
Spin Your Own Passive Cooling Fibres

When the temperature climbs, it’s an eternal problem: how to stay cool. An exciting field of materials science lies in radiative cooling materials, things which reflect so much incoming heat …

Hackaday
That Ultra-White Paint That Helps Cool Surfaces? Make Your Own!

It started with [KB9ENS] looking into paints or coatings for passive or radiative cooling, and in the process he decided to DIY his own. Not only is it perfectly accessible to a home experimenter, …

Hackaday

Oh Cellulose, eco-friendly friend
We praise your cooling powers to the end
Your biocompatibility
In the sun's utmost heat
Will keep us from getting too hot again

#cellulose #ecofriendly #radiativecooling #sustainability #ode #poetry

https://arstechnica.com/science/2023/05/beating-the-heat-these-plant-based-iridescent-films-stay-cool-in-the-sun/

Beating the heat: These plant-based iridescent films stay cool in the sun

Cellulose is sustainable, biocompatible, and ideal for radiative cooling applications.

Ars Technica