Plant Cuticles Exhibit Significant Mid-Infrared Emissivity in the Atmospheric Windows.
Antonio Heredia, Ana González-Moreno, José J Benítez, Eva Domínguez
Abstract
Open AccessAs sessile organisms, plants have developed strategies to cope with exposure to high radiation. The plant cuticle is located at the interface between the plant and the surrounding environment, thus acting as a first barrier that protects plants against environmental conditions, including solar radiation. The isolated cuticles displayed notable absorptance in the infrared spectral range which, according to Kirchhoff's law of thermal radiation, equals the emission dissipation ability. Comparison among the different cuticles showed that a significant range of their reflectance, transmittance, and absorbance spectra match the spectral regions known as atmospheric windows, between 3-4 and 8-13 microns, located within the mid-infrared region (MIR). They allow energy to pass through into the outer space. These optical parameters varied between cuticles from different plant species and they were not a simple function of the cuticle's thickness but the product of its specific composition in combination with its molecular arrangement.