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Home > NEOtech Coatings Blog > NEOtech Coatings Blog > Cool Surfaces > Cool Roof Technology. What the Headlines Leave Out!
Cool roofs are being pushed hard.
White surfaces. High reflectance. Lower surface temperatures. Reduced urban heat.
All valid. But most coverage stops at the surface and ignores fundamental heat physics with basic assumptions. It’s what’s missing that is also missing the mark for performance.
Take this article The Ongoing Rise Of Cool Roof Technologies In Neighborhoods Across America.
If we are serious about performance in a 2050 climate, we need to go beyond reflectivity headlines and look at actual heat behaviour through the building envelope.
White surfaces. High reflectance. High SRI. Lower surface temperatures. Reduced urban heat.
All valid.
But most coverage still stops at the surface.
If we are serious about performance in a 2050 climate, we need to go beyond reflectivity headlines and examine how heat actually behaves through the building envelope.
Here’s what typically happens in promotional coverage:
None of that is technically false. But what is missing changes the conclusion.
When the discussion avoids conduction, storage, time lag and interior heat flux, it becomes surface-centric.
Surface cooling becomes the goal. But surface cooling and interior heat load control are not the same objective.

Solar reflectance matters. It reduces absorbed radiation.
But a roof can reflect well and still:
Solar energy is approximately 44% visible light, 53% near infrared and 3% ultraviolet. If infrared behaviour is not properly managed, the majority of the heat load issue remains.
Reflectance reduces input.
It does not guarantee internal protection.
The US Department of Energy outlines the role of reflectance and emissivity in cool roofs here:
https://www.energy.gov/energysaver/cool-roofs
But that is only part of the thermal story.
Solar Reflectance Index incorporates:
So emissivity is not ignored in rating systems.
However, emissivity is often misunderstood in marketing language.
An emissivity of 0.91 does not mean 91% of heat is blocked and rejected.
Emissivity describes how effectively a surface emits radiation relative to a blackbody that absorbs and emits 100% of incident energy.
High emissivity means:
- If heat is absorbed, the surface can radiate it efficiently.
- It does not describe how much heat was prevented from entering.
- It does not describe how much heat penetrates through the material.
High emissivity improves surface cooling.
It does not equal heat blocking.
The major omission in most cool roof discussions is thermal diffusivity.
Thermal diffusivity answers a different question:
How fast does heat move through the material which is different to conductivity?
Low diffusivity slows heat penetration.
That affects:
Diffusivity is not captured in SRI.
You can have:
And still experience significant interior heat load if heat transfer through the substrate is rapid.
That’s the part most surface-focused articles ignore.
Advanced multi-ceramic insulation coatings specifically address heat transfer speed, not just reflectance.
Testing data and thermophysical properties are detailed here:
https://neotechcoatings.com/super-therm-testing-and-results/
Once diffusivity enters the conversation, the evaluation criteria shift.
And when the criteria shift, so do the material rankings.
This is where the conversation often gets sidetracked.
People say, “Just show me the conductivity.”
Conductivity measures how much heat flows through a material under steady conditions. It tells you the rate of heat transfer once temperatures stabilise, similar to R-values.
But roofs under solar load are not steady-state systems. They are dynamic.
Solar radiation rises through the morning, peaks in the afternoon and drops at night. That is a time-based heat event.
Thermal diffusivity measures something different:
How fast does that heat wave move through the material?
Diffusivity combines conductivity, density and specific heat. It determines the speed of temperature change through a system.
Two materials can have similar conductivity but behave very differently under real sun exposure if one has lower diffusivity.
Lower diffusivity means:
So conductivity tells you how much heat can flow.
Diffusivity tells you how fast the problem arrives.
When we are talking about roofs under intense solar cycling, dynamic speed matters.
That is why focusing only on conductivity misses a critical part of heat transfer behaviour.
Radiative daytime cooling is often presented as the next evolution in roof performance.
Reflect sunlight. Emit infrared heat to the sky. Achieve surface temperatures below ambient.
In ideal conditions, particularly clear and dry summer days, that mechanism can work well.
But it relies on assumptions that rarely get discussed.
Radiative cooling depends on atmospheric transparency. Cloud cover, humidity and urban density all reduce its effectiveness. If the sky is not a clear thermal sink, performance drops.
More importantly, materials engineered to maximise outward infrared emission do not turn off at sunset.
If a surface is highly emissive in the thermal infrared range, it can also accelerate heat loss at night and during winter.
That may help cool a roof in peak summer.
It may also increase heating demand when the building needs to retain warmth.
The assumption that radiative cooling is always beneficial ignores:
Summer optimisation without annual context is incomplete analysis which is similar to products promoted as ‘cool roofs’.
What improves peak heat rejection may unintentionally increase winter load if not evaluated across the full thermal cycle.
As with reflectance and emissivity, the issue is not that radiative cooling is wrong.
It is that performance must be assessed over the entire year, not just on the hottest afternoon.
Thermal images are persuasive. A cooler surface looks like success from the top.
But asset owners do not pay energy bills based on roof surface temperature.
They pay based on:
Unless conductive and radiative heat transfer into the structure is reduced, surface cooling alone does not guarantee operational savings.
The Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory provides deeper climate-based research into cool roofing performance across zones:
https://coolcolors.lbl.gov/
But even climate modelling must account for conduction and storage, not just reflectance.
This is where agendas blur lines.
If the objective is urban heat island mitigation, high-albedo surfaces are powerful.
If the objective is reducing interior cooling load and stabilising building performance, you must evaluate:
They are related problems.
They are not identical problems.
When media pieces merge them and promote a specific material category, the framework becomes biased toward surface metrics.
That shapes perception.
The term “cool roof” now covers:
Each has different thermophysical properties.
Each behaves differently under prolonged solar exposure.
Grouping them together under one simplified narrative hides meaningful performance differences.
If the objective is genuine surface heat load control, the focus must move from colour and SRI alone to full heat transfer behaviour.
Future-ready buildings are not defined by brightness.
They are defined by controlled heat flow.
That requires evaluating:
When those variables are analysed together, the envelope stabilises instead of cycling heat.
Cool roofs are part of the solution.
But if we want thermal-neutral buildings that genuinely reduce HVAC demand and extend asset life, the conversation must expand beyond simplified narratives and into full thermodynamics.
Surface colour starts the conversation.
Complete heat transfer analysis finishes it.
US Department of Energy. Cool Roofs Overview
https://www.energy.gov/energysaver/cool-roofs
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Cool Roof Research
https://coolcolors.lbl.gov/
NEOtech Coatings. Super Therm Testing and Results
https://neotechcoatings.com/super-therm-testing-and-results/
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