Additive‐Free, Gelled Nanoinks as a 3D Printing Toolbox for Hierarchically Structured Bulk Aerogels

Aerogels are highly porous solids that maintain the properties of individual nanomaterials at a macroscopic scale. However, the inability to fabricate hierarchical architectures limits technological implementation in energy storage, gas‐sorption, or catalysis. A 3D‐printing methodology for additive‐...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advanced functional materials 2022-05, Vol.32 (19), p.n/a
Hauptverfasser: Rebber, Matthias, Trommler, Malte, Lokteva, Irina, Ehteram, Samanehalsadat, Schropp, Andreas, König, Sandra, Fröba, Michael, Koziej, Dorota
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container_end_page n/a
container_issue 19
container_start_page
container_title Advanced functional materials
container_volume 32
creator Rebber, Matthias
Trommler, Malte
Lokteva, Irina
Ehteram, Samanehalsadat
Schropp, Andreas
König, Sandra
Fröba, Michael
Koziej, Dorota
description Aerogels are highly porous solids that maintain the properties of individual nanomaterials at a macroscopic scale. However, the inability to fabricate hierarchical architectures limits technological implementation in energy storage, gas‐sorption, or catalysis. A 3D‐printing methodology for additive‐free TiO2 nanoparticle‐based aerogels is presented with full control of the nano‐, micro‐, and macroscopic length‐scales. To compensate for ink's low solid loading of 4.0 vol% and to enable subsequent processing into aerogels via supercritical drying, the printing is done in a liquid bath of alkaline pH. The 3D‐printing protocol retains a high specific surface area of 539 m2 g–1 and a mesopore diameter of 20 nm of conventionally casted aerogels while offering an unparalleled designability on the micrometer scale. To illustrate the new geometric freedom of 3D‐printed aerogels, the microstructure of a strongly light‐absorbing, photothermal Au‐nanorod/TiO2 aerogel is defined. To date, photothermal nanomaterials are mainly applied in the form of unstructured films where scalability is limited by light attenuation. Microstructures in 3D enhance light penetration by a factor of four and facilitate spatially defined heating on a macroscopic scale. The process can be generalized for a broad material library and allows to design inks with specific functionality, thus making aerogels adaptable for their target application. A 3D printing strategy for TiO2‐nanoparticle‐based aerogels is reported. The combination of additive‐free, gelled nanoinks with 3D printing technology enables the fabrication of hierarchically structured bulk aerogels. The strategy can be applied to a broad range of nanomaterials and makes aerogels more versatile and engineerable for their target application.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/adfm.202112914
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subjects 3D printing
Aerogels
Energy storage
Gold
hierarchical structures
Inks
Light attenuation
Materials science
metal oxides
Microstructure
Nanomaterials
Nanoparticles
Nanorods
photothermal
plasmonics
Three dimensional printing
Titanium dioxide
title Additive‐Free, Gelled Nanoinks as a 3D Printing Toolbox for Hierarchically Structured Bulk Aerogels
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