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More efficient heating insulation, more robust building materials, more environmentally sustainable energy production – which is particularly important in winter – are all due primarily to the rapid progress in materials and energy management. Nanotechnology is increasingly playing a critical role.

“Daily high temperatures near freezing, snow, and sleet will cause slick streets – also expect strong and stormy winds”: When you’re sitting in a well heated living room, you may suddenly appreciate the importance of building techniques.
Effective thermal insulation is central to a comfortable indoor climate, while consuming the minimum possible amount of energy. Governments are enacting increasingly rigid energy consumption ordinances for new as well as existing buildings. It’s no wonder in times of urgent climate discussions – nearly a fifth of all CO2 emissions in Germany is attributable to buildings. In private households in Germany, an average 75 percent of energy consumption is used for indoor heating alone.

Nanopores keep heat where it belongs
To drive down exterior wall heating requirements to near passive house levels, it is possible to install 20 to 30-centimeter thick layers of conventional insulating material, such as polystyrene – but this approach has undesirable effects on aesthetics and space requirements.
It is also possible to use more intelligent insulating materials. Today, silica-aerogels are available – highly porous, noncombustible solids made of silicon dioxide and air: over 90 percent of the volume consists of pores, which are only a few nanometers in size. Similar nanoporous foams based on synthetics are currently in development.

From an oven to a research station in Antarctica
Nanopores make aerogels rigid, somewhat translucent, and lend them a remarkably large interior surface area, often totaling over 1,000 square meters per gram – which makes this class of materials attractive for a wide variety of applications. Their structure ensures extremely low thermal conductivity: there are far too many small amounts of the base material present to transmit significant heat, and heat conductivity is effectively impeded.
Such nanoporous foams can be applied to conventional insulating panels that have been previously installed on building façades to retain heat inside buildings – to keep boilers hot or keep a refrigerator cold that is near an oven. Likewise, material in the form of granulate can be used as spray insulation or, with even greater effectiveness, as a filler for vacuum insulation panels. A unique example is the use of aerogel as a translucent filler between glass panels, which results in diffuse, translucent, heat- and sound-insulating building components. It’s not only a good idea for our latitudes: a British research station in Antarctica has installed this distinctive type of glazing.

Steel that does not rust
Probably the most important and most commonly used material in construction is concrete, which is essentially a mixture of cement, water, and gravel (aggregate). Maximum structural performance is achieved by optimizing concrete at the nanotechnological level. Pores form in concrete, which cause compression strength to diminish. The surface area subject to concrete-damaging substances can corrode and become larger. Adding the right particle can provide protection by filling the tiny cavities, making the concrete more compact, harder, and more durable.
To achieve this, over the last decade researchers in the town of Kassel in Germany systematically studied the nanostructure of concrete. In order to find the optimum mixture, they measured possible particle additives on a scale of nanometers. When tensile strength is increased by adding steel fibers, the result is a material with the properties of steel that does not rust: ultra high performance concrete (UHPC).

The material has already been used to construct several bridges, including the Gärtnerplatz Bridge in Kassel, Germany and numerous smaller bridges in the American state of Iowa. The advantages: structures last longer and require less material thickness. This conserves raw materials and helps protect the climate: the production of cement is responsible for nearly five percent of global CO2 emissions.
 
Better solar cells

As an emissions-free source of energy, electricity from sunlight is playing an increasingly important role. A key objective is to continue optimizing solar cells in terms of material consumption, effectiveness, and cost. One approach makes use of thin-layer cells made from silicium that are up to 1,000 times thinner than conventional photovoltaic elements – and save a corresponding amount of materials. The problem is, if they are too thin, too much sunlight can pass through unimpeded, instead of producing electricity. A current technique is to disperse the light with zinc oxide crystals, so that the path distance within the silicium layer becomes greater. It was a challenge to force zinc oxide crystals into the correct nanoscaled shape, so that the technique could function properly. Researchers have however found an efficient solution: they produce a negative of the desired structure and allow zinc oxide crystals to form on it. The nanolayer can then be removed.
Another path of development is the Grätzel cell. Inventor Michael Grätzel won the 2010 Millennium Prize – in essence the Nobel Prize for engineers – for developing the technology. It generates electricity not in semiconductor layers but instead in special dyes, based on a process borrowed from natural photosynthesis. The Grätzel cell promises inexpensive, flexible, and transparent solar panels – even a window could become a photovoltaic cell. “Nano” is also found is this development: titanium dioxide is a necessary component, which captures the electrons that are set free from the dye by sunlight and transmits them to the electrical circuit.
Titanium dioxide is a nanoporous material or a material occurring in nanoparticles. It is used extensively as a white color pigment in wall paint and as a UV reflector in sunscreen lotions.

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