Intellectually Curious

Liquid Windows: Squid Skin-Inspired Smart Glass for Buildings

6 min · 27 de may de 2026
portada del episodio Liquid Windows: Squid Skin-Inspired Smart Glass for Buildings

Descripción

A deep dive into a University of Toronto breakthrough that uses stacked, squid-skin–inspired fluid layers to dynamically manage light and heat in buildings. We explore how chromatophores and iridophores translate into three layers—an intensity layer, a scattering layer, and a near-infrared absorbing spectral layer—implemented with transparent plastics and microchannels. By pumping fluids, the system lets visible light through while blocking heat, with AI-driven real-time control to optimize lighting, cooling, and heating. The approach promises 25–50% energy savings and scalable, cost-efficient smart glass for future skylines. Note:  This podcast was AI-generated, and sometimes AI can make mistakes.  Please double-check any critical information. Sponsored by Embersilk LLC [https://www.embersilk.com/]

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episode Liquid Windows: Squid Skin-Inspired Smart Glass for Buildings artwork

Liquid Windows: Squid Skin-Inspired Smart Glass for Buildings

A deep dive into a University of Toronto breakthrough that uses stacked, squid-skin–inspired fluid layers to dynamically manage light and heat in buildings. We explore how chromatophores and iridophores translate into three layers—an intensity layer, a scattering layer, and a near-infrared absorbing spectral layer—implemented with transparent plastics and microchannels. By pumping fluids, the system lets visible light through while blocking heat, with AI-driven real-time control to optimize lighting, cooling, and heating. The approach promises 25–50% energy savings and scalable, cost-efficient smart glass for future skylines. Note:  This podcast was AI-generated, and sometimes AI can make mistakes.  Please double-check any critical information. Sponsored by Embersilk LLC [https://www.embersilk.com/]

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Research Reimagined: Papers You Can Talk To

Justin Ross, a professor of public finance and economics, co-authored a new empirical working paper (alongside Whitney Afonso and Denvil Duncan) and built a local Model Context Protocol (MCP) server to accompany it. This MCP provides a structured interface that allows readers to interact with the paper's underlying data using natural language via a Large Language Model (LLM).  Integrating Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers into research papers could act as a "positive referee productivity shock" that significantly speeds up the peer review process.  We dive deep! Note:  This podcast was AI-generated, and sometimes AI can make mistakes.  Please double-check any critical information. Sponsored by Embersilk LLC [https://www.embersilk.com/]

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