4.7 Article

On Thermal Insulation Properties of Various Foaming Materials Modified Fly Ash Based Geopolymers

期刊

POLYMERS
卷 15, 期 15, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym15153254

关键词

phenolic resin; hydrogen peroxide; silica aerogel; fly ash geopolymer; thermal insulation performance

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigates the influence of phenolic resin, silica aerogel, and hydrogen peroxide on the thermal insulation performance of fly ash geopolymer. The results show that the combination of these three modifying agents significantly reduces the thermal conductivity of fly ash geopolymer. The optimal composition scheme achieves a thermal conductivity of 0.08 W/m·K. Phenolic resin promotes the formation of a network structure and increases the porosity of micron-sized pores. Hydrogen peroxide decomposes into O2 and leaves large-diameter pores during curing. Silica aerogel reduces thermal conductivity and can react with the alkali activator to form water, creating pores after water evaporation.
Geopolymers can be used as a thermally insulated material because of their considerable porosity, whereas the combined effect of various modifying agents on their heat-insulating properties remains unexplored. Here, orthogonal experiments were carried out to evaluate the thermal insulation performance of fly ash geopolymer modified by phenolic resin, silica aerogel, and hydrogen peroxide. Moreover, variance analysis and range analysis were applied to estimate the influence of modifying agents on the thermal insulation performance of the geopolymer. The results demonstrate that the thermal conductivity of fly ash geopolymer significantly reduces (from 0.48 W/m & BULL;K to 0.12 W/m & BULL;K) due to the combined effect of the three modifying agents. Based on the variance analysis and range analysis, the optimum thermal conductivity ultimately reaches 0.08 W/m & BULL;K via a best composition scheme of the three modifying agents. Moreover, phenolic resin can facilitate the formation of a network structure and increase the porosity of micron pores (>1 & mu;m). Hydrogen peroxide can be decomposed into O-2 in an alkaline environment and leave large-diameter pores (>1 & mu;m) during curing. Some silica aerogel is embedded in the geopolymer matrix as microspheres with extremely low thermal conductivity, whereas the rest of the silica aerogel may react with the alkali activator to form water, and subsequently leaves pores (>1 & mu;m) after evaporation of water during the curing. In addition, a newly modified Maxwell-Euchen model using iterative calculation and considering the Knudsen effect (pores of micron or even nanometer scale) is proposed and validated by the experimental data. The foamed geopolymer in this research can be used as a reference for building insulation layer design. This research unravels phenolic resin-, silica aerogel-, and hydrogen peroxide-influenced thermal insulation mechanisms of geopolymer that may have impacts on deployment of a thermally insulating material in the construction field.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.7
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据