2021
DOI: 10.1002/adem.202100376
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Aerogel Spring‐Back Correlates with Strain Recovery: Effect of Silica Concentration and Aging

Abstract: Silica aerogels display exceptional properties and great application potential, with a mature market in thermal insulation. Both supercritical drying (SCD) and ambient pressure drying (APD) routes are implemented industrially. Herein, how aging and silica content affect the mechanical properties, and how these in turn determine the shrinkage, spring back, and density during APD are systematically investigated. The APD densities display a U‐shaped dependence of density w.r.t. silica concentration. At low silica… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(20 citation statements)
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References 79 publications
(118 reference statements)
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“…Insufficient hydrophobization leads to condensation reactions of silanol groups and irreversible shrinkage of the network 11 . The SBE is believed to occur because of the viscoelastic behavior of hydrophobized gels, which is influenced by the density and aging of the material 12 . The latter increases the stiffness of the network by densification, and when done insufficiently, might lead to a pore collapse 13 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Insufficient hydrophobization leads to condensation reactions of silanol groups and irreversible shrinkage of the network 11 . The SBE is believed to occur because of the viscoelastic behavior of hydrophobized gels, which is influenced by the density and aging of the material 12 . The latter increases the stiffness of the network by densification, and when done insufficiently, might lead to a pore collapse 13 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…density, and at higher densities recover a large fraction of their original volume after decompression (Sivaraman et al, 2021), as do some other elastic cellulose composites (Françon et al, 2020;Wong et al, 2015). The diameter of the cylinders did not change significantly after compression and decompression, i.e., the apparent Poisson's ratio is close to zero (Table S1).…”
Section: Mechanical Propertiesmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…89,90 Mutual repulsion produced by hydrophobic functional groups can maintain the structural integrity during the process of drying, different from the shrinkage of SAs with hydrophilic functional groups. [91][92][93] For example, Wei et al 33 modied silica aerogels with the hydrophobic group in low surface tension solvent. The as-prepared aerogels have a crack-free structure and volume shrinkage of less than 1%.…”
Section: Psasmentioning
confidence: 99%