4.7 Article

Ultraviolet-assisted direct-write printing strategy towards polyorganosiloxane-based aerogels with freeform geometry and outstanding thermal insulation performance

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 455, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2022.140818

Keywords

Polyorganosiloxane aerogel; 3D printing; Photopolymerization; Rheology; Solidification

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An ultraviolet-assisted direct-write printing strategy has been proposed for fabricating polyorganosiloxane-based aerogels with tunable molecular triple-crosslinks, which exhibit outstanding nanoporous performances and are ideal materials for shape-dominated thermal insulation applications.
Developing aerogels with a tailored geometric feature is of prime importance for enlarging their functional effects in application scenarios. However, conventional manufacturing techniques have remained challenging in the on-demand shaping of aerogels due to their costly and time-consuming fabrication process and poor designability of casting molds. Herein, an ultraviolet-assisted direct-write printing strategy has been proposed for fabricating polyorganosiloxane-based aerogels with tunable molecular triple-crosslinks consisting of hydrogen bonds, hydrocarbon chains, and polysiloxanes. The implementation of direct-write printing depends on the close synergy of consecutive ink deposition and instantaneous photopolymerization, appearing as a considerable characteristic of solidification-while-printing, which is conducive to constructing spatially freeform geometries with high structural complexity and shape fidelity. The resultant 3D-printed polyorganosiloxane-based aerogels exhibit outstanding nanoporous performances, such as low density (0.14 g center dot cm(-3)), high surface area (484 m(2)center dot g(-1)), superhydrophobicity (water contact angle, 150.), high specific modulus (27.9 kN center dot m center dot kg(-1)), and low thermal conductivity (37.48 mW center dot m(-1)center dot K-1), which are ideal materials for shape-dominated thermal insulation applications. This work would provide an alternative printing strategy to fabricate nanoporous materials with arbitrary architectures for wider applications.

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