Next-generation photochromic smart window: Wood-derived cellulose flexible composites integrated thermal insulation, UV-shielding, and anti-counterfeiting
Xiuling Yang , Gaigai Duan , Yanbo Liu , Jingquan Han , Xiaoshuai Han , Hui Fu , Shuijian He , Yong Huang , Kai Zhang , Yu Yin , Shaohua Jiang
InfoMat ›› 2026, Vol. 8 ›› Issue (1) : e70049
Addressing the dual challenges of global energy sustainability and dynamic optical management, we present an innovative flexible photochromic transparent fluorescent wood composite film (PT-FWF) with molecular-scale engineered design, fabricated through in situ Eu3+ coordination on TEMPO-oxidized cellulose scaffolds. This hierarchically structured material combines fluorescent wood film with hot-pressing, impregnation, and coating (PMMA/WO3) to achieve multimodal optical control. PT-FWF demonstrates exceptional multifunctionality: 88% optical transparency, 107.5° ± 1.0° hydrophobicity surface, and thermal insulation (ΔT ≈ 5.5°C). A unique dual-mode photoresponsive mechanism enables through synergistic photochromic-fluorescent effects: instantaneous fluorescence under UV light and coloring/bleaching with or without light-assisted (UV or simulated sunlight). The smart window model exhibits over 90% UV-blocking efficiency, and the transmittance of the smart window can be reversibly switched between 88% and 5% under prolonged light conditions, showing a high modulation of visible light (∆Tlum = 83%) at 1030 nm, enabling simultaneous daylight optimization and energy conservation. This molecular-scale engineered wood composite defines a transformative platform for adaptive optical materials, merging energy-efficient architectural solutions with information encryption through sunlight-regulated smart windows that simultaneously enable environmental protection and anti-counterfeiting.
anti-counterfeiting / europium-coordination / photochromic / smart window / thermal insulation / transparent cellulose composites
| [1] |
|
| [2] |
|
| [3] |
|
| [4] |
|
| [5] |
|
| [6] |
|
| [7] |
|
| [8] |
|
| [9] |
|
| [10] |
|
| [11] |
|
| [12] |
|
| [13] |
|
| [14] |
|
| [15] |
|
| [16] |
|
| [17] |
|
| [18] |
|
| [19] |
|
| [20] |
|
| [21] |
|
| [22] |
|
| [23] |
|
| [24] |
|
| [25] |
|
| [26] |
|
| [27] |
|
| [28] |
|
| [29] |
|
| [30] |
|
| [31] |
|
| [32] |
|
| [33] |
|
| [34] |
|
| [35] |
|
| [36] |
|
| [37] |
|
| [38] |
|
| [39] |
|
| [40] |
|
| [41] |
|
| [42] |
|
| [43] |
|
| [44] |
|
| [45] |
|
| [46] |
|
| [47] |
|
| [48] |
|
| [49] |
|
| [50] |
|
| [51] |
|
| [52] |
|
| [53] |
|
| [54] |
|
| [55] |
|
| [56] |
|
| [57] |
|
2025 The Author(s). InfoMat published by UESTC and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.
/
| 〈 |
|
〉 |