4.8 Article

Superhydrophobic Silica Aerogels and Their Layer-by-Layer Structure for Thermal Management in Harsh Cold and Hot Environments

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 15, Issue 12, Pages 19771-19782

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c07184

Keywords

aerogel; personal thermal management; phase change materials; microenvironment; harsh environment

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2016YFA0203301]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91963124, 51773225]
  3. Suzhou Science and Technology Bureau [SJC2021008]

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This study successfully prepared superhydrophobic silica aerogels through a solvent-boiling strategy and designed a layer-by-layer structure including a silica aerogel layer and a phase change material layer. This structure demonstrated dual-functional thermal regulation performance in harsh hot and cold environments.
Personal thermal management (PTM) materials have recently received considerable attention to improve human body thermal comfort with potentially reduced energy consumption. Strategies include passive radiative cooling and warming. However, challenges remain for passive thermal regulation of one material or structure in both harsh hot and cold environments. In this work, silica aerogels derived from sodium silicate were prepared through a solvent-boiling strategy, where hydrophobization, solvent exchange, sodium purification, and ambient pressure drying (HSSA) proceeded successively and spontaneously in a one-pot process. This strategy leads to the synthesis of superhydrophobic silica aerogels with extremely low energy consumption without out the use of an ion-exchange resin or low surface tension solvents. Silica aerogels possess a high specific surface area (635 m(2)/g), high contact angle (153 degrees ), and low thermal conductivity (0.049 W/m K). A layer-by-layer (LBL) structure including the silica aerogel layer and an extra phase change material layer was designed. The structure demonstrates dual-functional thermal regulation performance in both harsh cold (-30 degrees C) and hot (70 degrees C) environments, where the time to reach equilibrium is postponed, and the inner temperature of the LBL structure can be kept above 20 degrees C in harsh cold environments (-30 degrees C) and below 31 degrees C in harsh hot environments (70 degrees C). A proof-of-concept experimental setup to simulate the illumination of sunlight also proved that the inside temperature of a model car protected by the LBL structure was below 28 degrees C, while the outside temperature was 70 degrees C. In addition, these results are well supported by theoretical COMSOL simulation results. The findings of this work not only provide an eco-friendly approach to synthesize silica aerogels but also demonstrate that the LBL structure is a robust dual-functional PTM system for thermal regulation in both harsh hot and cold environments.

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