4.8 Article

Ultralight Conductive Silver Nanowire Aerogels

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 12, Pages 7171-7176

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b02790

Keywords

Metal foams; silver nanowires; aerogel; ultralight; conductive

Funding

  1. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under the U.S. Department of Energy under LDRD award [DE-AC52-07NA27344, 13-ERD-022, 14-SI-004, 16-ERD-019, LLNL-JRNL-730883]

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Low-density metal foams have many potential applications in electronics, energy storage, catalytic:supports, fuel cells, sensors, and medical devices. Here, we report a new method for fabricating ultralight, conductive silver aerogel monoliths with predictable densities using silver nanowires. Silver nanowire building blocks were prepared by polyol synthesis and purified by selective precipitation. Silver aerogels were produced by freeze-casting nanowire aqueous suspensions followed by thermal sintering to weld the nanowire junctions. As-prepared silver aerogels have unique anisotropic microporous structures, with density precisely controlled by the nanowire concentration, down to 4.8 mg/cm(3) and an electrical conductivity up to 51 000 S/m. Mechanical studies show that silver nanowire aerogels exhibit elastic stiffening behavior with a Young's modulus up to 16 800 Pa.

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