Abstract
Aerogels have numerous applications due to their high surface area and low densities. However, creating aerogels from a large variety of materials has remained an outstanding challenge. Here, we report a new methodology to enable aerogel production with a wide range of materials. The method is based on the assembly of anisotropic nano-objects (one-dimensional (1D) nanotubes, nanowires, or two-dimensional (2D) nanosheets) into a cross-linking network from their colloidal suspensions at the transition from the semi-dilute to the isotropic concentrated regime. The resultant aerogels have highly porous and ultrafine three-dimensional (3D) networks consisting of 1D (Ag, Si, MnO2, single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs)) and 2D materials (MoS2, graphene, h-BN) with high surface areas, low densities and high electrical conductivities. This method opens up a facile route for aerogel production with a wide variety of materials and tremendous opportunities for bio-scaffold, energy storage, thermoelectric, catalysis and hydrogen storage applications.
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Introduction
Aerogels are extremely porous materials with large pore volumes and low bulk densities. Their unique structure imparts extraordinary properties and wide applications1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8. Despite the considerable need for aerogels, at present there are only limited types of materials that can be made into an “aerogel” structure. These include metal oxide aerogels (such as SiO2, Al2O3)9,10, carbon material aerogels (such as carbon, carbon nanotubes, graphene)11,12,13,14, semiconducting chalcogenide aerogels (such as CdS, CdSe, PbTe)15,16 and more recently polysaccharide17 or protein-based aerogels18. Most aerogels are formed by extracting the liquid of a gel via critical point drying (CPD) in order that the gel network remains intact. The gel networks are assembled through a sol-gel process, where nanoparticle suspensions are formed and then the nanoparticles are crosslinked into 3D network branches by a suitable gelling agent precursor (Fig. S1a). Because of these specific cross-linking reactions, the material types of aerogels have been very limited. Therefore, there are a large number of interesting possibilities in creating a wide range of aerogels if gels can be assembled by the crosslinkng of the material itself without gel precursors.
We have recently come up with a new methodology to make gels, which will enable the synthesis of aerogel materials over a much wider range. This idea is inspired by the observation of gel formation. Gels consist of a solid 3D network that spans the volume of a liquid medium and due to the surface tension by the solid structure, the liquid does not flow. If long chain molecules, or colloidal particles of 1D (i.e., nanowires or nanotubes) are dispersed in a liquid (e.g., water), when their concentrations in the water reaches a certain level, the chances for them to interlink with each other will be high, thus the flow of water is stopped and a gel forms. As a result, these 1D objects become the branches in the 3D network themselves (Fig. S1b). If the colloidal particles are 2D nanosheets, compared to a spherical particle of the same volume, these 2D nanosheets contribute a lot more to viscosity in their stretched state and the interlinking network from these 2D nanosheets will also form a gel (Fig. S1c). Therefore, in principle, a gel can be facilely made from almost any material by starting with the colloid suspensions of 1D nanowires/nanotubes or 2D nanosheets of various kinds of materials. And once a gel is formed, it is straightforward to develop an aerogel material by extracting the liquid via CPD.
Results
Formations of 1D nanowires, nanotubes and 2D nanosheets aerogels
This methodology for various material aerogels production constitutes three steps: (i) the preparation of a well-dispersed, individual nanotube/nanowire/nanosheet suspension; (ii) gel formation from dilute suspensions through a controlled concentration increase and (iii) the supercritical drying of the gel to form an aerogel. Figure 1a is a schematic representation of the aerogel production. Here nanowires are shown as an example. A suspension of nanowires is initially uniformly dispersed with/without surfactant in ethanol using ultra-sonication at a low concentration and then the dilute suspension transforms into a more concentrated state to form a gel network by evaporation of the solvent at low temperature (313 K) with a large volume compression. At higher concentration the suspension becomes a gel consisting of a 3D network of nanowires. The resultant gel is then set into various shapes using molds and the molded gel is transferred into water. The water is maintained at 353 K and changed several times to remove the surfactants. After that, the gels are supercritically dried into aerogels to retain the original gel volume (see Supplementary Information for a more detailed method). There are two key elements in this method: first is the homogeneous dispersion at dilute concentration, which prevents nanowire/nanotube/nanosheet bundling or agglomeration; second is the slow evaporation process of the solvent, which helps to reduce the volume of the nanowire/nanotube/nanosheet suspension to produce a concentrated suspension without nanowire/nanotube/nanosheet aggregation.
In this work, as shown in Fig. 1b and c, Ag, Si, MnO2, SWNT, MoS2, graphene and h-BN were selected because of a variety of potential applications. The Ag nanowire aerogel is a great candidate for a scaffold for tissue engineering and Si nanowires can be used as thermoelectric materials. MnO2 nanowire, SWNT and graphene aerogels have a huge potential for supercapacitors and batteries. In addition, MoS2 and h-BN aerogels can be useful for catalysts and H2 storage, respectively. The second photograph in Fig. 1b shows the vials containing the suspensions which are turned up-side down, confirming the gel formation from the more concentrated suspension of nanowires/nanotubes. The shape of the gels could be readily manipulated by different molds so that aerogels have various desired shapes. Figure 1c shows photographs of the gels and aerogels and the formation processes of gels with 2D materials and those illustrated here are MoS2, graphene and h-BN gel/aerogels.
Gel formation concentration
Based on the Doi and Edwards theory which describes the phase behavior of a suspension of rod-like molecules19, the range of gel formation concentrations can be predicted in this work. Here the term “nanowire” is used to represent both nanowires and nanotubes. The dynamic behavior of nanowires in a suspension depends on the concentration and the aspect ratio of the nanowires. Thus, based on the degree of particle interaction and the excluded volume of a nanowire, the nanowire in a suspension can be classified into four concentration regimes as: dilute solution, semi-dilute solution, isotropic concentrated solution and liquid crystalline (Fig. S2). Following this theory, we consider a suspension of n nanowires per unit volume, each nanowire with a length L and a diameter d and a corresponding aspect ratio ar = L/d. The nanowire concentration described through the volume fraction ϕ is defined20 as
As the concentration of the nanowire suspension increases, the rotational motion of each nanowire is inhibited by other nanowires and some physical contact interaction between nanowires is present21. At a still higher concentration, the nanowire suspension forms a 3D continuous nanowires network due to physical bond formation at the contact point between the nanowires by van der Waals forces. The gel formation occurs at the transition from the semi-dilute to isotropic concentrated regime22,23,24. The gel formation concentration is ϕ = ar−1 when n = 1/(dL2). Thus we define this concentration to be the theoretical gel formation concentration ϕ gel and ϕ gel = ar−1.
Our experimental observation is consistent with this theoretical gel formation concentration (ϕ gel) based upon the Doi and Edwards theory. The average aspect ratio values of Ag, Si and MnO2 nanowires were obtained as 121, 127 and 442, respectively, from their average diameter and length (see Table 1 and Fig. S3). Thus the theoretical gel formation concentration ϕ gel of Ag, Si and MnO2 nanowires should be 0.0083, 0.0079 and 0.0023, respectively and the average experimental gel transition concentrations (ϕ′gel) of Ag, Si and MnO2 nanowires were found to be 0.0071, 0.007 and 0.0018, respectively. As a result, we could confirm that the ϕ′gel values are very close to the ϕ gel value and indeed the gels are formed near the ϕ gel.
In the case of 2D materials, the dilute suspensions were concentrated and transformed into the gels of 2D sheets at 3.2, 1 and 2.1 wt% for MoS2, graphene and h-BN nanosheets, respectively. The relation between the sheet aspect ratio and the gel formation concentration shall be further considered in future work.
Structures of the aerogels
The SEM images of Ag, MnO2, Si and SWNT aerogels in Fig. 2a, b and Fig. S4a, b displays 3D networks with ultrafine 1D nanowire/nanotube structures. The 2D material aerogels show a porous 3D network of randomly oriented sheet-like structures (Fig. 2c and Fig. S5). These images indicate highly porous nanowire/nanotube/nanosheet networks with pore sizes in the range of a few hundred nanometers to a few micrometers. The key factors of the formation of an unbundled or non-aggregated nanowire/nanotube/nanosheet network are the homogeneous dispersion of the dilute suspensions and the slow evaporation of the solvent. In the case of nanowires with small diameters, they were dispersed at low concentrations with surfactants to prevent the strong van der Waals attraction between small diameter nanowires. The uniformly dispersed dilute suspension was then slowly compressed up to the gel formation concentration by evaporating the solvent at low temperature to avoid nanowire aggregation. On the other hand, nanowire gels formed from non-uniformly dispersed suspensions without surfactant or directly from a concentrated suspension produce bundled nanowire networks (compare Fig. S6a with S6b).
Discussion
The porosities of Ag, Si, MnO2, SWNT and graphene aerogels were confirmed by N2 adsorption-desorption analysis. Figure 3a and 3b show the N2 adsorption-desorption isotherm and pore size distribution of MnO2 nanowire aerogel as an example. All the aerogels showed a type IV isotherm with H3-type hysteresis loop, which indicate that mesopores have cylindrical pore geometries (Fig. 3a and Fig. S7)25. Their surface areas were calculated with the Brunauer-Ennett-Teller (BET) method (Table 2). The ultra-fine porous nanowire networks result in high surface areas. The MnO2 nanowire aerogel has a surface area of 82.2 m2g−1 (Fig. 3a, which is 2 times larger than the surface area of MnO2 nanowire membrane with the same starting MnO2 nanowire material26. The surface area value of 1011 m2g−1 for a SWNT aerogel is 5.5 times higher than the best reported SWNT-based aerogels27 and also close to the theoretically calculated specific surface area (1315 m2g−1 for SWNTs28). The aerogels have also low densities, as shown in Table 2. The Ag nanowire aerogel density is 88 mg/cm3, relatively high due to the large diameter (average diameter is 113 nm), but a SWNT aerogel has the lowest density of 2.7 mg/cm3, compared with those of previously reported the SWNT or multi-walled nanotube (MWNT) aerogels27,29,30 and only two times higher than an air density of 1.2 mg/cm3.
As can be seen from the SEM images of the aerogels produced in this work, the branches of the 3D networks consist of highly crystalline nanowires or nanosheet material. In contrast, aerogels produced by conventional methods typically have interlinking nanocrystallites (as illustrated by Fig. S1a vs. Fig. S1b, c). As a result, it can be anticipated that the aerogels produced by this work should have good electrical conductivities, as the electrical conduction in the conventional aerogels normally occur via electron hopping between the nanocrystallites (Fig. S1a), whereas in the aerogels developed by this work the nanowires or nanosheets directly provide the path for electrical conduction. Indeed, the electrical conductivity of an Ag nanowire aerogel is 3 × 106 S/m for an aerogel density of 88 mg/cm3 (which is the gel formation concentration) (Table 2). This value is comparable to the conductivity of thick (600 nm) Ag nanowires films31 and on the same order of magnitude as bulk silver (9.4 × 106 S/m)32. For other aerogels, we obtained 91 S/m for SWNT and 273 S/m for graphene aerogels at densities corresponding to their gel formation concentrations (2.7 mg/cm3 and 13 mg/cm3, respectively). When aerogels are made at higher densities, even a higher electrical conductivity can be achieved. For example, 302 S/m was obtained for a SWNT aerogel at 20 mg/cm3, while a graphene aerogel with 24 mg/cm3 shows a conductivity of 390 S/m. These values are 3 ~ 5 times higher than values previously reported13,27. Similarly, it is anticipated that these aerogels should have different mechanical properties compared to the conventional aerogels. The conventional aerogels (as shown in Fig. S1a) have low tensile strength and elastic modulus (i.e. they are brittle and will readily fragment when bent) because in these aerogels, the branches of the 3D network are formed by many nanocrystallites interlinked together, which tends to break with applied forces14. In contrast, the nanotubes/nanowires in the aerogels in this work can easily accommodate elastic bending, thus these aerogels should be very elastic. Indeed super-elastic behavior has been observed for MnO2 nanowire aerogels and further mechanical characterization is currently underway.
It should be noted that the properties of the aerogel materials developed in this work will rely on the starting nanowires/nanotubes/nanosheets materials. If the starting nanowires have long lengths and small diameters, an aerogel with a high surface area, low density, high electrical conductivity and high tensile strength can be anticipated.
In conclusion, the strategy developed in this work to form gels can be applied to many materials by starting with the colloid suspension of either 1D nanowires/nanotubes or 2D nanosheets. Once a gel is formed, it is straightforward to develop an aerogel material by extracting the liquid via supercritical drying. This method provides a straightforward yet powerful and potentially general route for the creation of a wide variety of aerogels. In principle, aerogels from any type of materials can be enabled by this method. Combining their individual material properties (e.g., high electrical conductivity from a metal, or optical properties like photoluminescence of a semiconductor) with the advantages imparted by the structure (such as high surface area and low densities), it can be anticipated that not only much wider opportunities will be opened up for the typical applications of aerogels (such as catalysis, sensing, thermoelectrics, scaffolds for tissue engineering, supercapacitors, batteries and solar cells) but potentially novel applications as well.
Methods
Materials
Ag and Si nanowires were purchased from Blue Nano (SLV-NW-90) and Aldrich (product number: 731498), respectively. MnO2 nanowires were synthesized by hydrothermal method. The starting materials were composed of 19.1 mmol of potassium sulphate (K2SO4), potassium persulphate (K2S2O8) and manganese sulphate monohydrate (MnSO4·H2O) in a ratio of 1:2:1 in 80 ml deionized (DI) water26. The suspension was transferred to a Teflon vessel and the sealed vessel was heated at in an oven at 523 K for 4 days26. The synthesized MnO2 nanowires were suspended in 800 ml of DI water. The suspension was filtered and washed several times until all soluble impurities were removed from the solid and then the nanowires were dried in a vacuum oven at 353 K for 24 hr.
Purified HIPCO Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes (SWNTs) were obtained from Unidym, Inc and MoS2, graphite and h-BN powders were obtained from Aldrich (CAS number: 1317-33-5), Alfa Asear (product number: 43319), Aldrich (CAS number: 10043-11-5), respectively. Linear sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate (SDBS) and planar sodium cholate (SC) were used as surfactant for dispersion of 1D and 2D materials, respectively.
Formations of 1D nanowires, nanotubes and 2D nanosheets gels
Firstly, Ag and Si nanowires were each dispersed via ultra-sonication (Branson 2510 sonicator) in ethanol without and with SDBS for 10 ~ 60 min, respectively. The MnO2 nanowires were sonicated in ethanol with SDBS for 2 h. The concentrations of Ag, Si and MnO2 nanowires were 10, 3 and 2 mg·mL−1, respectively. The surfactant/nanowires weight ratios were all 5:1.
In the case of SWNT gels, the suspension of 0.1 wt% SWNTs was dispersed in DI water with SDBS at a SWNT: SDBS ratio of 1:5 for 5 ~ 15 h by Branson 2510 sonicator. The MoS2, graphite and h-BN powders were sonicated in 2 wt% SC solution for 4 ~ 15 h. The concentrations of MoS2, graphite and h-BN powders were 66, 85 and 66 mg·mL−1, respectively33,34. The SWNT suspension was centrifuged (Eppendorf centrifuge 5804 R) to separate bundles from the individual nanotubes at 11 k rpm for 1 ~ 2 h. The exfoliated MoS2, graphene and h-BN sheets were centrifuged at 1500 rpm for 1 h to remove the non-exfoliated powders. The supernatant in each case was collected after centrifugation and measured with a Cary 6000i UV-Vis-NIR spectrophotometer. The concentration of the MoS2, graphene, SWNT and h-BN suspensions were calculated using an absorption coefficient (α) of 1517, 2460 and 2600 absorbance mL·mg−1 m−1 at a wavelength of 672, 660 and 930 nm, respectively33,34,35.
The dilute suspensions of Ag, Si, MnO2, SWNT, MoS2, graphene and h-BN were evaporated at 313 K to transform them into more concentrated suspensions (gels) with a large volume compression. The resultant gels were set into a cylinder or rectangular shaped molds for several hours and the molded gels were transferred to DI water. The solutions were heated up 353 K to remove surfactant and changed at least 4 to 5 times over several days. This step removed surfactant, as shown in the SEM images (Fig. 2, Fig. S4 and Fig. S5).
The Ag, Si, MnO2, SWNT, MoS2, graphene and h-BN gels were placed into anhydrous ethanol overnight for solvent exchange and then dried at 1,200 psi and 308 K by using a critical point drier (CPD, 13200J-AB, SPI supplies) into the Ag, Si, MnO2, SWNT, MoS2, graphene and h-BN aerogels keeping the gel network intact (Fig. 2, Fig. S4 and Fig. S5).
Characterization
Atomic force microscope (AFM) measurements were carried out to characterize the diameter distribution of nanowires with a Dimension 3100, Veeco system. Scanning electron microscopy (JEOL 6700F) was used to find the length distribution of nanowires and the porosities of the aerogel networks. Nitrogen adsorption and desorption isotherms for the porosities of the aerogels were measured at 77 K on a Micromeritics ASAP 2020 system. Before measurement, the samples were degassed at 423 K under vacuum (<10−4 mbar) for several hours. Surface areas of the aerogels were calculated from the Brunauer-Ennett-Teller (BET) method multimolecular layer adsorption model. The electrical conductivities of the Ag nanowire, SWNT and graphene aerogels at room temperature were measured using a four-probe station for porous materials36. The resulting errors in the electrical conductivity measurement are estimated to be less than 5%.
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Acknowledgements
The authors acknowledge the funding from MIT Energy Initiative, National Science Foundation award number NSF DMR 0845358 and the generous gift from Doug Spreng. S. M. J. acknowledges MIT Institute of Soldier Nanotechnologies (ISN) for the access of various instruments to carry out this work and the help from Prof. Pablo Jarillo-Herrero, Britt Baugher, Dr. Mario Hofmann and Yongcheol Shin and Dr. Tingying (Helen) Zeng.
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S.M.J. and J.K. designed experiments and S.M.J. carried out most experiments and H.Y.J. carried out electrical conductivity measurements. S.M.J., H.Y.J. and J.K. discussed the results. S.M.J. wrote the manuscript and all authors contributed to revisions.
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A facile route for 3D aerogels from nanostructured 1D and 2D materials
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Jung, S., Jung, H., Dresselhaus, M. et al. A facile route for 3D aerogels from nanostructured 1D and 2D materials. Sci Rep 2, 849 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep00849
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep00849
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