4.7 Article

Polyurea Aerogels: Synthesis, Material Properties, and Applications

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym14050969

Keywords

polyurea; aerogel; isocyanate; amine; water; mineral acid; structure-property relationships; nanomorphology; K-index

Funding

  1. U.S. Army Research Office [W911NF-14-10369, W911NF-12-2-0029, W911NF-10-1-0476]
  2. National Science Foundation [CHE-0809562, CMMI-0653919]
  3. BASF Polyurethanes GmbH

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Polyurea aerogels are a well-established class of polymeric aerogels derived from isocyanates. They can be prepared through different reactions, resulting in a broad array of nanostructures and functional properties. Polyurea-based aerogels have already been commercialized in various fields.
Polyurea is an isocyanate derivative, and comprises the basis for a well-established class of polymeric aerogels. Polyurea aerogels are prepared either via reaction of multifunctional isocyanates with multifunctional amines, via reaction of multifunctional isocyanates and water, or via reaction of multifunctional isocyanates and mineral acids. The first method is the established one for the synthesis of polyurea, the third is a relatively new method that yields polyurea doped with metal oxides in one step, while the reaction of isocyanates with water has become the most popular route to polyurea aerogels. The intense interest in polyurea aerogels can be attributed in part to the low cost of the starting materials-especially via the water method-in part to the extremely broad array of nanostructural morphologies that allow study of the nanostructure of gels as a function of synthetic conditions, and in part to the broad array of functional properties that can be achieved even within a single chemical composition by simply adjusting the synthetic parameters. In addition, polyurea aerogels based on aromatic isocyanates are typically carbonizable materials, making them highly competitive alternatives to phenolic aerogels as precursors of carbon aerogels. Several types of polyurea aerogels are already at different stages of commercialization. This article is a comprehensive review of all polyurea-based aerogels, including polyurea-crosslinked oxide and biopolymer aerogels, from a fundamental nanostructure-material properties perspective, as well as from an application perspective in thermal and acoustic insulation, oil adsorption, ballistic protection, and environmental cleanup.

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