Electric infrared wallpaper should be effective in poorly-insulated homes
Electric infrared wallpaper you can plug in to heat individual rooms is set to be trialled in Nottingham homes that leak heat.
A company, which makes the wallpaper, says infrared can provide greener, cheaper heating when paired with solar panels and batteries.
NexGen Heating say its priority market is hard-to-heat homes facing fuel poverty.
But heat pumps are still more efficient for well-insulated homes.
The wallpaper acts as an infrared radiator to heat people and furniture
A total of 45 social housing groups across the UK are already testing how effective the graphene-filled paper is to heat homes that would be expensive to insulate.
NexGen's chief executive, Ian Sanderson, says the firm is are targeting social housing with poor insulation.
"There's a direct correlation between fuel poverty and hard-to-heat homes. We're trying to help people as well as the environment," he said.
Chris Pryke-Hendy, from Nottingham Community Housing Association (NCHA), wants to trial the wallpaper in the next two years
Researchers at Nottingham Trent University want to find out more.
They see infrared as a solution for older properties, which need expensive retrofitting before they can reliably abandon oil and gas.
Dr Mike Siebert, a lecturer in low-carbon construction, is impressed.
"Everything we've looked at so far is a positive," he says.
"Health benefits, cost benefits, carbon benefits. It's very hard to find a negative."
The secret to making this wallpaper act as a radiator is the layer of carbon under the surface called graphene.
Graphene is a thin layer of carbon atoms in a hexagonal structure. It emits infrared when powered by the electricity conducted through two copper strips, one on each side of the wallpaper strip.
Provided you do not cut through the copper, the paper can be cut to fit around light fittings and painted to match your room décor.
Chris Pryke-Hendy, head of sustainability for Nottingham Community Housing Association (NCHA), says electric wallpaper has potential to allow older homes to ditch fossil fuels and switch to green electric heating.
"What appeals to us [about infrared wallpaper] is that the heat is almost instant. It can be really responsive when people feel they need their heating," he said.
Analysis
By Sally Bowman, BBC East Midlands environment correspondent
At a demonstration organised by Nottingham Trent University, people were invited to stand under NexGen's gazebo, lined with their infrared wallpaper.
When I try it, the effect is like stepping from cool shadow into a warm patch of sunshine. A thermal-imaging camera shows what is going on.
Using the same wavelength as sunlight, the infrared radiation is not heating the air.
It is heating me, and the furniture around me, up to a distance of two to three metres. The effect is instant and can be triggered by motion sensors.
Even after it is switched off, any fabric in the room continues to give off gentle heat for hours afterwards, creating a "thermal battery".
Follow BBC East Midlands on Facebook, external, on X, external, or on Instagram, external. Send your story ideas to eastmidsnews@bbc.co.uk , externalor via WhatsApp, external on 0808 100 2210.
Farewell radiators? Testing out electric wallpaper
Six out of 10 renters live in energy-inefficient homes
Nottingham Trent University
Nottingham Community Housing Association
Image released after motorcycle finance fraud incidents
Nottinghamshire NHS Trust ‘truly sorry’ after inspection finds patients at risk
Bassetlaw drink driver found ‘unresponsive’ in car was FOUR times over the limit
Hospital colleagues win 'Bereavement Team of the Year' Award
Jam-packed programme of events for spring and summer Jam-packed programme of events for spring and summer
Ashfield man ‘only joking’ when he told probation officer of petrol bomb threat
Lost power, mayday call and crash before Baltimore bridge collapse
Six presumed dead after Baltimore bridge collapse
Watch: The critical moments before ship hit Baltimore bridge. Video
What we know about Baltimore bridge collapse
Bowen: Biden has decided strong words are not enough
How Russia pushed false claims about Moscow attack
19th Century law fires up anti-abortion push
At Gate 96 – the new crossing into Gaza where aid struggles to get in
Fear, faith, friendship: Inside F1’s most precious relationship
Who are IS-K, blamed for attack on Moscow concert hall?
From jail to Africa's youngest elected president
Indians celebrate Holi – the festival of colours
Conquering Everest's 'Death Zone' on skis
Find out how a Japanese alpinist became the first person to ski down Mount Everest
'You do feel like you're invincible'
Why are so many young men risking their lives on the UK's roads?
How Trump's golf dream turned into a nightmare…
His controversial golf development in Aberdeenshire was greenlit with awful consequences
How many big hits from 1995 will you remember?
Featuring Ace of Base, The Rolling Stones, Oasis, David Bowie and many more
© 2024 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.

source