Quantitative Evaluation of the Hierarchical Porosity in Polyimide Aerogels and Corresponding Solvated Gels.

2020 
Aerogels are promising materials for many aerospace applications, including high performance antennae and flexible insulation because of their inherent low density and high surface areas. Polymer aerogels, especially polyimide aerogels, provide excellent mechanical properties beyond traditional silica aerogels while maintaining the required thermal stability. Polyimide aerogel surface area, porosity, and pore volume are important properties; however, these measurements are traditionally conducted on the aerogel after removal of the solvent. Because of this, the impact of the synthetic control and the solvent presence on the nanoscale to mesoscale structure of polyimide aerogels in functional applications is unclear. In this report, we use small angle neutron scattering to determine the dry and solvated skeletal strut size and composition of polyimide aerogels to deduce the impact of solvation on the structure of complex aerogel struts. Our results show that the aerogel contains a hierarchical assembly of pores, with pores both within and between the supporting struts. This translates to a material with solvent in the larger pores, as well as absorbed in the supporting polyimide skeleton. The amount of solvent uptake in the struts varies with solvent and polyimide properties. The insight from these results provides pathways to determine correlations between aerogel nano- and mesoscale structural characteristics and fabrication processes to their performance in functional applications such as polymeric battery separators. These results also broaden the characterization tools of polymeric aerogels that differentiate between dry and solvated nano- and mesoscale structure that exist in common operating conditions.
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