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X-MINING Neutral-Tone Near-Infrared Shielding Material (CPT)

This article reports part of the technical testing results for "CPT," a near-infrared absorbing material currently under development by Sumitomo Metal Mining. Please note that the product is not yet commercially available and samples are not being provided at this time.

How to control the bluish tint without reducing the strength of near-infrared absorption

We report the results of testing a new near-infrared absorbing material with a neutral color using Cs-doped polytungstate (CPT) material. Since two decades ago we have manufactured and provided nanoparticles of proprietary LaB6 (lanthanum hexaboride) and CWO™* (cesium-doped tungsten oxide) as near-infrared absorbing materials. Near-infrared absorbing materials are used for various types of glass coatings, laminated glasses, and plastic glasses in automotive and general architectural windows. However, there exist weak greenish and bluish tints in LaB6 and CWO™ transparent filters, respectively, that are desired removed to a high colorless visible light transmissibility and a neutral color tone, like ITO (tin-doped indium oxide) while maintaining a stronger near-infrared absorption than ITO.

* CWO™ is a registered trademark of Sumitomo Metal Mining. CWO™ is a near-infrared absorbing nanoparticle invented by our company and covered by patents and trademarks both domestically and internationally. It is a conductive nanoparticle obtained by adding cesium to tungsten oxide, representing a novel type of thermal absorbing nanoparticle that we independently developed in 2004. The material technology brand utilizing CWO™ is SOLAMENT™.

 

We have identified the potential for a new technology that allows the blue level to be controlled between those of CWO™ and ITO without reducing the high strength of near-infrared absorption by developing CPT materials with an orthorhombic or trigonal crystal structure in contrast to the hexagonal CWO™.

A part of this development was published as a paper in the Royal Chemical Society’s scientific journal, RSC Advances.

CWO™ is a NIR-shielding filter with high visible light transparency, but is accompanied by a slight bluish tint.
To completely eliminate the bluish tint, we have developed CPT (Cs-doped polytungstate) being released this time.

The extent to how much the color is neutralized is shown in the transmission profiles of nanoparticles dispersion filters in Fig. 1.


Fig. 1

For fair comparison this figure plots the transmission profiles of materials under constant (72.3%) visible light transmittance (VLT). ITO is known as a colorless transparent material. Since the transmittance at the visible wavelengths is transmitted evenly with respect to the human eye’s visual sensitivity curve, it looks colorless. On the other hand, CWO™ has a relatively high transmittance in blue and low transmittance in red because it shields near visible light in the near infrared. For this reason, the CWO™ filter becomes a bluish membrane even if it is transparent.

The CPTs developed shown in CPT-1~CPT-5 have profiles in between CWO™ and ITO. In other words, as indicated by the red arrows, the transmittance of blue light at 400 nm drops significantly as compared to CWO™. On the contrary, the transmittance of red light at 720 nm increases greatly. The color of the CPT filter looks more neutral. The degree of neutral color can be chosen, from the bluish CWO™ to the colorless ITO.

On the other hand, the transmittance of CPT drops greatly in the near infrared wavelengths, indicating the strong absorption of NIR light. Moreover, even if the degree of neutral color is changed, the amount of NIR absorption does not change just by shifting the location of the absorption peak (transmission bottom) among samples, (although, the thermal effect changes with the peak wavelength). This effect is fundamentally different from that given by diluting CWO™ dispersions. Color changes of the presently developed CPT-1~CPT-5 is based on the controlled difference in microstructure and electronic structure.

Why can this effect be obtained?

To understand the color, it is necessary to know the absorption coefficient of plasmonic nanoparticle dispersions. Fig. 2 shows the experimental (dotted line) and calculated (solid lines) CWO™ absorption coefficients.

Fig. 2

CWO™ has a very small absorption coefficient at the visible wavelengths from 380nm to 780nm. However, at the blue and red wavelengths at both ends, the absorption becomes stronger, and the principle behind each is different.
Absorption of blue wavelengths occurs by the electronic band-edge transition in the material. The band-edge transition occurs when electrons in the valence band of a material are excited to vacant orbitals in the conduction band. Therefore, the narrower the band gap, the smaller the energy of excitation and the greater the absorption of blue wavelengths. In this study, we have achieved this using a CPT material with a slightly smaller bandgap than CWO™.

On the other hand, the red-wavelength absorption is caused by the localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) and polaronic absorption. Because CWO™ has a hexagonal crystal structure, LSPR resonant wavelengths and relaxation constant are different in directions parallel and perpendicular to the c-axis. The relative involvement of polaron and plasmon absorptions varies with the structure of the material per se as well as the size, shape, and distribution of the scattered nanoparticles, and other factors. Therefore, both the polaron and plasmon absorptions are important. If the absorption wavelengths of both are shifted toward longer wavelengths, the absorption of red light decreases, so the color shifts toward neutrality. LSPR wavelengths depend on the number and effective mass of resonant electrons. On the other hand, the polaronic absorption is caused by the excitation of localized electrons trapped by W ions, so that the absorption wavelength can be controlled by the polaron density, i.e., oxygen vacancy concentration. In this way, we were able to shift the NIR absorption to longer wavelengths and increase the transmittance of red light mainly by reducing the number of resonant electrons and polaron concentration to slightly less than CWO™.

Appendix

Innovations in materials will be made little by little. The CPT material shown here greatly improves the blue tone of the membrane but does not completely render it colorless. For perfect achromatization, a square transmittance profile with visible light is ideal, whereas for particulate dispersion filters, this realization is in principle constrained by the relaxation phenomenon of electrons. In CWO™ and CPT materials, there seems to be little additional margin in luminous transparency and NIR shielding that can actually be obtained as a feasible particulate dispersion filter. Although now approaching to the limit, Sumitomo Metal Mining Co., Ltd. will continue to pursue this.

1. Satoshi Yoshio, Masao Wakabayashi and Kenji Adachi, “Cesium polytungstates with blue-tint-tunable near-infrared absorption”, RSC Advances, Vol.10, pp. 10491-10501 (2020)
2. K. Machida, M. Okada, K. Adachi, “Excitations of free and localized electrons at nearby energies in reduced cesium tungsten bronze nanocrystals”, Journal of Applied Physics, Vol. 125, p. 103103 (2019)

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