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Dive into the research topics where Sharon S. Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by Sharon S. Chen.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2018

High quantum yield of the Egyptian blue family of infrared phosphors (MCuSi4O10, M = Ca, Sr, Ba)

Paul Berdahl; Simon K. Boocock; George C.-Y. Chan; Sharon S. Chen; Ronnen Levinson; Michael A. Zalich

The alkaline earth copper tetra-silicates, blue pigments, are interesting infrared phosphors. The Ca, Sr, and Ba variants fluoresce in the near-infrared (NIR) at 909, 914, and 948 nm, respectively, with spectral widths on the order of 120 nm. The highest quantum yield ϕ reported thus far is ca. 10%. We use temperature measurements in sunlight to determine this parameter. The yield depends on the pigment loading (mass per unit area) ω with values approaching 100% as ω → 0 for the Ca and Sr variants. Although maximum quantum yield occurs near ω = 0, maximum fluorescence occurs near ω = 70 g m−2, at which ϕ = 0.7. The better samples show fluorescence decay times in the range of 130 to 160 μs. The absorbing impurity CuO is often present. Good phosphor performance requires long fluorescence decay times and very low levels of parasitic absorption. The strong fluorescence enhances prospects for energy applications such as cooling of sunlit surfaces (to reduce air conditioning requirements) and luminescent solar concentrators.The alkaline earth copper tetra-silicates, blue pigments, are interesting infrared phosphors. The Ca, Sr, and Ba variants fluoresce in the near-infrared (NIR) at 909, 914, and 948 nm, respectively, with spectral widths on the order of 120 nm. The highest quantum yield ϕ reported thus far is ca. 10%. We use temperature measurements in sunlight to determine this parameter. The yield depends on the pigment loading (mass per unit area) ω with values approaching 100% as ω → 0 for the Ca and Sr variants. Although maximum quantum yield occurs near ω = 0, maximum fluorescence occurs near ω = 70 g m−2, at which ϕ = 0.7. The better samples show fluorescence decay times in the range of 130 to 160 μs. The absorbing impurity CuO is often present. Good phosphor performance requires long fluorescence decay times and very low levels of parasitic absorption. The strong fluorescence enhances prospects for energy applications such as cooling of sunlit surfaces (to reduce air conditioning requirements) and luminescent solar ...


Environmental Science & Technology | 2018

Optimization of Secondary Air Injection in a Wood-Burning Cookstove: An Experimental Study

Julien J. Caubel; Vi H. Rapp; Sharon S. Chen; Ashok J. Gadgil

Nearly 40% of the worlds population regularly cooks on inefficient biomass stoves that emit harmful airborne pollutants, such as particulate matter (PM). Secondary air injection can significantly reduce PM mass emissions to mitigate the health and climate impacts associated with biomass cookstoves. However, secondary air injection can also increase the number of ultrafine particles emitted, which may be more harmful to health. This research investigates the effect of secondary air injection on the mass and size distribution of PM emitted during solid biomass combustion. An experimental wood-burning cookstove platform and parametric testing approach are presented to identify and optimize secondary air injection parameters that reduce PM and other harmful pollutants. Size-resolved measurements of PM emissions were collected and analyzed as a function of parametric stove design settings. The results show that PM emissions are highly sensitive to secondary air injection flow rate and velocity. Although increasing turbulent mixing (through increased velocity) can promote more complete combustion, increasing the total flow rate of secondary air may cause localized flame quenching that increases particle emissions. Therefore, biomass cookstoves that implement secondary air injection should be carefully optimized and validated to ensure that PM emission reductions are achieved throughout the particle size range.


Archive | 2017

Verifying mixing in dilution tunnels How to ensure cookstove emissions samples are unbiased

Daniel L. Wilson; Vi H. Rapp; Julien J. Caubel; Sharon S. Chen; Ashok J. Gadgil

Author(s): Wilson, D; Rapp, VH; Caubel, JJ; Chen, SS; Gadgil, AJ | Abstract: A well-mixed diluted sample is essential for unbiased measurement of cookstove emissions. Most cookstove testing labs employ a dilution tunnel, also referred to as a “duct,” to mix clean dilution air with cookstove emissions before sampling. It is important that the emissions be well-mixed and unbiased at the sampling port so that instruments can take representative samples of the emission plume. Some groups have employed mixing baffles to ensure the gaseous and aerosol emissions from cookstoves are well-mixed before reaching the sampling location [2, 4]. The goal of these baffles is to to dilute and mix the emissions stream with the room air entering the fume hood by creating a local zone of high turbulence. However, potential drawbacks of mixing baffles include increased flow resistance (larger blowers needed for the same exhaust flow), nuisance cleaning of baffles as soot collects, and, importantly, the potential for loss of PM2.5 particles on the baffles themselves, thus biasing results. A cookstove emission monitoring system with baffles will collect particles faster than the duct’s walls alone. This is mostly driven by the available surface area for deposition by processes of Brownian diffusion (through the boundary layer) and turbophoresis (i.e. impaction). The greater the surface area available for diffusive and advection-driven deposition to occur, the greater the particle loss will be at the sampling port. As a layer of larger particle “fuzz” builds on the mixing baffles, even greater PM2.5 loss could occur. The micro structure of the deposited aerosol will lead to increased rates of particle loss by interception and a tendency for smaller particles to deposit due to impaction on small features of the micro structure. If the flow stream could be well-mixed without the need for baffles, these drawbacks could be avoided and the cookstove emissions sampling system would be more robust.


Archive | 2016

Development of a Long-Life-Cycle, Highly Water-Resistant Solar Reflective Retrofit Roof Coating

Georgios Polyzos; S. R. Hunter; Jaswinder Sharma; Mengdawn Cheng; Sharon S. Chen; Victoria Demarest; William Fabiny; Hugo Destaillats; Ronnen Levinson

Highly water-resistant and solar-reflective coatings for low-slope roofs are potentially among the most economical retrofit approaches to thermal management of the building envelope. Therefore, they represent a key building technology research program within the Department of Energy. Research efforts in industry and the Department of Energy are currently under way to increase long-term solar reflectance on a number of fronts. These include new polymer coatings technologies to provide longer-lasting solar reflectivity and improved test methodologies to predict long-term soiling and microbial performance. The focus on long-term improvements in soiling and microbial resistance for maximum reflectance does not address the single most important factor impacting the long-term sustainability of low-slope roof coatings: excellent water resistance. The hydrophobic character of asphaltic roof products makes them uniquely suitable for water resistance, but their low albedo and poor exterior durability are disadvantages. A reflective coating that maintains very high water resistance with increased long-term resistance to soiling and microbial activity would provide additional energy savings and extend roof service life.


Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells | 2014

Soiling of building envelope surfaces and its effect on solar reflectance – Part II: Development of an accelerated aging method for roofing materials

Mohamad Sleiman; Thomas W. Kirchstetter; Paul Berdahl; Haley E. Gilbert; Sarah Quelen; Lea Marlot; Chelsea V. Preble; Sharon S. Chen; Amandine Montalbano; Olivier Rosseler; Hashem Akbari; Ronnen Levinson; Hugo Destaillats


Solar Energy | 2014

Reflectometer measurement of roofing aggregate albedo

Ronnen Levinson; Sharon S. Chen; Paul Berdahl; Pablo J. Rosado; Louis A. Medina


Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells | 2015

Soiling of building envelope surfaces and its effect on solar reflectance - Part III: Interlaboratory study of an accelerated aging method for roofing materials

Mohamad Sleiman; Sharon S. Chen; Haley E. Gilbert; Thomas W. Kirchstetter; Paul Berdahl; Erica Bibian; Laura S. Bruckman; Dominic Cremona; Roger H. French; Devin A. Gordon; Marco Emiliani; Justin Kable; Liyan Ma; Milena Martarelli; Riccardo Paolini; Matthew Prestia; John Renowden; Gian Marco Revel; Olivier Rosseler; Ming Shiao; Giancarlo Terraneo; Tammy Yang; Lingtao Yu; Michele Zinzi; Hashem Akbari; Ronnen Levinson; Hugo Destaillats


Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells | 2016

Fluorescent cooling of objects exposed to sunlight – The ruby example

Paul Berdahl; Sharon S. Chen; Hugo Destaillats; Thomas W. Kirchstetter; Ronnen Levinson; Michael A. Zalich


Energy and Buildings | 2017

Methods and instrumentation to measure the effective solar reflectance of fluorescent cool surfaces

Ronnen Levinson; Sharon S. Chen; Chiara Ferrari; Paul Berdahl; Jonathan L. Slack


Archive | 2018

Calibration of laboratory aging practice to replicate changes to roof albedo in a Chinese city

Sharon S. Chen; Hugo Destaillats; Jing Ge; Ronnen Levinson

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Ronnen Levinson

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Paul Berdahl

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Hugo Destaillats

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Haley E. Gilbert

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Thomas W. Kirchstetter

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Ashok J. Gadgil

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Julien J. Caubel

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Olivier Rosseler

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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