Electro- and thermochromic materials have been greatly applied in smart windows and displays due to the excellent properties of color variation and solar radiation. However, the mono color and single response to voltage and temperature hinder their application and development. Here, a multimode dynamic color-changing device (T/ECD) was developed by integrating the electrochromic property of synthetic viologen dyes and the thermochromic properties of hydroxypropyl acrylate (HPA). The T/ECD achieves four modes of optical regulation, namely, colorless transparent state, tinted transparent state, colorless opaque state, and tinted opaque state, which can be regulated independently/coordinately using heat and voltage. The optimized T/ECD switched color at 1.2 V with 15 s or adjusted the transparent/opaque state at >34 °C with 46 s. In addition, based on the red viologen (ViO-R), green viologen (ViO-G), and blue viologen (ViO-B) dyes, colorful T/ECDs were successfully designed and fabricated, and T/ECDs have excellent cycling properties, expanding the application requirement. Moreover, we demonstrated their application in smart windows and privacy protection. The design philosophy and successful exploration have great prospects for energy-saving buildings, displays, and information masking/storage systems.
Keywords: energy saving; multimode; optical regulation; smart windows; thermo/electrochromic.