Here, we report the gelation and supercritical drying of ethanol-based silica–resorcinol–melamine–formaldehyde (RMF) composite aerogels with relative concentrations of initial reagents ranging from neat silica to neat RMF alcogels. The as-prepared… Click to show full abstract
Here, we report the gelation and supercritical drying of ethanol-based silica–resorcinol–melamine–formaldehyde (RMF) composite aerogels with relative concentrations of initial reagents ranging from neat silica to neat RMF alcogels. The as-prepared materials are subsequently supercritically dried with carbon dioxide. Their properties include a thermal conductivity in the 15–20 mW·m–1·K–1 range even with a silica content as low as 20%wt. The possible reasons behind this interesting insulation performance and the mechanisms leading to the underlying gel structure are discussed in depth. A focus is made on the different gelation modes happening between the RMF and silica phases, from a coating of silica surfaces with RMF species to discontinuous RMF particles within a silica backbone and a continuous RMF backbone with isolated silica particles. The implications in terms of mechanical properties and thermal conductivity are elaborated upon. The initial ratio of silica–RMF species in this ethanol-based synthesis affects the micro- and macrostructure of the composites, resulting in materials with drastically different pore structures and thus an interesting array of possibilities for a new class of silica-organic composite aerogels, based on a sol–gel process.
               
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