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Aerogel

aerogel.jpg
Aerogel is a silicon-based substance often called frozen smoke or blue smoke. It is composed of 99.8% air and is a stiff foam with a density of 3 mg per cm3, which makes it the world's lightest solid.

With a highly dendritic structure, aerogel has extremely low thermal conductivity, which gives it remarkable insulative properties.

Aerogel has a melting point of 1,200° celsius. Its almost transparent nature makes it suitable for trapping dust particles, as it did aboard the Stardust spacecraft.

Aerogel is made by drying a gel composed of colloidal silica in an extreme environment. It is the result of coordinated research between NASA and Aspen Systems, Inc.

To make this strange material, scientists start with a liquid alcohol like ethanol and mix it with silicon dioxide to form a gel. Then, through a process called supercritical drying, the alcohol is forced out of the gel, typically with high-pressure carbon dioxide. With this drying process, the gel does not collapse or lose its volume. It appears holographic because the silicon dioxide scatters shorter wavelengths of light much like air in the daytime sky. Despite its diaphanous appearance, it feels like hard plastic foam.

Aerogel holds 14 entries in the Guinness Book of Records for material properties, including best insulator and lightest solid. Aerogel can support 2000 times its own weight without collapsing.

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Aerogel".

 

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