Discovery and History
The Beginning
Due to the relative obscurity of aerogels until lately, it is generally assumed that they are a fairly recent discovery. However,
the first aerogels were created in 1931 by Samuel S. Kistler at the College of the Pacific in Stockton, California. It was he that
hypothesized that a “gel” is composed of a continuous solid network of the same size and shape of the wet gel and that it would be
possible to remove the liquid without damaging the solid network.
If a wet gel is allowed to simply dry, it would shrink and crack. Kistler correctly deduced that the solid component of the
gel was microporous, and that the liquid-vapor interface of the evaporating liquid exerted strong surface tension forces that
collapsed the pore structure of the gel. He then discovered the crucial aspect of aerogel production.
"Obviously, if one wishes to produce an aerogel [Kistler is credited with coining the term "aerogel"], he must replace the liquid with air by some means in which the surface of the liquid is never permitted to recede within the gel. If a liquid is held under pressure always greater than the vapor pressure, and the temperature is raised, it will be transformed at the critical temperature into a gas without two phases having been present at any time." (S. S. Kistler, J. Phys. Chem. 34, 52, 1932).
The first attempts at aerogels were by using silica gels created via acidic concentration of aqueous sodium silicate. Kistler
converted the water in the silica gels into supercritical fluid in an attempt to remove the water. These endeavors failed though
because the supercritical water dissolved the silica and therefore left no solid structure. Kistler then tried again by first thoroughly
washing the silica gels with water (to remove any salts from the gel), and then exchanging the water for alcohol via an organic
process. Converting the alcohol to a supercritical fluid and
allowing it to escape allowed Kistler to form the first true aerogels.
The Next Step
Following his discovery, Samuel Kistler continued his aerogel research at the University of Illinois (1931-1935). Many
important early publications on the properties of aerogels came out of his work there, including studies on the thermal conductivity
of silica aerogel, and the catalytic properties of various oxide aerogels.
In the early 1940s, Samuel Kistler completed a license agreement with the Monsanto Corporation for the production of
silica aerogel. Monsanto began production in a plant in Everett, Massachusetts and sold products for many years under the trade
names "Santocel", "Santocel-C", "Santocel-54", and "Santocel-Z". Monsanto's aerogels were used as an additive or a thixotropic
agent in cosmetics and toothpastes and also as an insulator for freezers and oxygen-producing plants. The aerogels were mainly
based on SiO2 for production purposes but Kistler also did research by making aerogels using many other materials such as
alumina, tungsten oxide, ferric oxide, tin oxide, nickel tartarate, cellulose, cellulose nitrate, gelatin, agar, egg albumen, and rubber.
However, Kistler soon turned his attention to research in other areas and little new work was done on aerogels. Production of
aerogels ceased when cheaper alternatives made them unnecessary. Aerogels widely disappeared until their possibilities were
looked into again.
Monsanto Aerogel Factory Removing Aerogel from autoclave
The Return of the Aerogels
In the late 1960s/early 1970s, scientists were looking for a medium in which to store oxygen and liquid rocket fuel. The
French government approached Stanislaus Teichner of Universite Claud Bernard in Lyon, France. They wanted him to test the
possibilities of aerogels for this use. Teichner delegated the task of creating of the aerogels for the test to one of his graduate
students. Using Kistler's method, the first batch of aerogels took weeks to prepare. Teichner then informed his hapless graduate
student that a vast number of aerogel samples would be needed for him to complete his dissertation. Realizing this project could
take years, his student went home very distraught. He returned after a rest determined to find a more efficient way to produce
aerogels. A major advance in aerogel science followed shortly thereafter. He applied sol-gel chemistry to the preparation of silica
aerogel and found a much quicker way of producing high quality aerogels. His process involved replacing the sodium silicate used
by Kistler with an alkoxysilane, (tetramethyorthosilicate, TMOS). An "alcogel" was produced in one step by hydrolyzing TMOS
in a solution of methanol. This one-step process was much quicker and successfully eliminated two major downsides of Kistler's
method of production, the water-to-alcohol transfer and salts that were left in the gel. The “alcogels” were then dried under
supercritical alcohol conditions, which produced high-quality silica aerogels. In the years that followed, Teichner's group, and
others, extended this approach and prepared an array of different metal oxide aerogels.
The Aerogel Renaissance
Following Teichner’s (Or more correctly, his student’s) discovery, interest in aerogels was heightened. Research was
begun and soon new discoveries were being made. Safer and more efficient synthesis processes were created and new uses were
found for aerogels. Their potential also began to become evident and possibilities were delved into. For example, in the early 1980s
particle physicists realized that silica aerogels would serve as ideal mediums for the production and detection of Cherenkov
radiation. Two large detectors were created and put into use.
The first plant designed to implement the TMOS method of aerogel production was created in Sjobo, Sweden. The plant
implemented a 3000-liter autoclave designed to endure the strain of containing the high temperatures and pressures needed for
supercritical methanol conditions (240 degrees C and 1600 p.s.i.). However, during a production run in 1984 the autoclave
developed a leak. The chamber housing the autoclave quickly filled with methanol vapors and consequently exploded. There were
no deaths in this accident, but the entire facility was completely destroyed by the massive explosion. The plant was later rebuilt and
actually it continues to produce silica aerogels to this very day using the same method.
A revolutionary process modification was discovered in 1983 by Arlon Hunt and the Microstructured Materials Group at
Berkeley Lab. They found that the very toxic and potentially dangerous compound TMOS could be replaced with
tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS). TEOS is non-toxic and much safer than TMOS. The Microstructured Materials Group was also
able to achieve this without degrading the quality of the aerogels produced. The Microstructured Materials Group also found that
they could replace the alcohol within a gel with liquid carbon dioxide before supercritical drying portion of the process without
harming the aerogel’s structure. This discovery made it so another portion of the process was safer. Since the critical point of CO2
(31 degrees C and 1050 p.s.i.) is much lower than that of methanol (240 degrees C and 1600 p.s.i.), the conditions needed were
much safer. Carbon dioxide also doesn’t pose the explosion hazard that alcohol does. The German chemical giant BASF also
developed similar CO2 substitution methods for the preparation of silica aerogel beads from sodium silicate around the same time.
Other notable achievements and uses that followed:
Late 1980s - Researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) prepared the world's lowest density silica aerogel (actually the lowest density of any solid material). The aerogel had a density of 0.003 g/cm3, which is only three times the density of air.
LLNL also modified the techniques used to prepare inorganic aerogels for use in the preparation of aerogels of organic polymers. These polymers included resorcinol-formaldehyde and melamine-formaldehyde aerogels. Resorcinol-formaldehyde aerogels could also be pyrolyzed to give aerogels of pure carbon. This was an especially important discovery that opened a whole new vista of aerogel research.
Very low-density silica aerogel, prepared at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), was used to collect and return samples of high-velocity cosmic dust on several Space Shuttle missions.
Researchers at the University of New Mexico managed to eliminate the supercritical drying step used in aerogel production by chemically modifying the surface of the gel prior to drying.
Discovery and History // Synthesizing Aerogels // Uses: Current and Future // Research and What Lies Ahead