Abstract
Thermochromic smart windows are a promising technology to reduce energy consumption in buildings, particularly in tropical regions where cooling demands are high. Vanadium dioxide (VO(2)) is the most studied thermochromic material due to its reversible semiconductor-to-metal transition near 68 °C. Conventional synthesis routes require long reaction times and post-annealing steps. In this work, we report a rapid hydrothermal synthesis of monoclinic VO(2)(M) and tungsten-doped VO(2)(M) powders obtained within only 6 h at 270 °C, using vanadyl sulfate as precursor and controlled precipitation at pH ≈ 8.5. Differential scanning calorimetry confirmed the reversible transition at 59 °C for the undoped VO(2), with a hysteresis of 18 °C, while tungsten doping reduced the transition temperature by ~17 °C per wt.% of W. X-ray diffraction verified the monoclinic phase with minor traces of VO(2)(B), a non-thermochromic polymorph of VO(2), and microstructural analysis revealed crystallite sizes below 35 nm. Electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering confirmed particle sizes suitable for dispersion in polymeric matrices. This approach significantly reduces synthesis time compared to typical hydrothermal methods requiring 20-48 h and avoids further annealing. The resulting powders provide a low-cost and scalable route for fabricating thermochromic coatings with transition temperatures closer to ambient conditions, making them relevant for smart-window applications in tropical climates, where lower transition temperatures are generally regarded as beneficial.