Fast synthesis of micro/mesoporous xerogels: Textural and energetic assessment
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The sol-gel polymerization of resorcinol/formaldehyde mixtures to obtain porous gels is typically a long process performed throughout several days. In this work, we have explored an experimental approach to reduce the time necessary to obtain porous gels based on mild polymerization conditions and direct drying. We have analyzed the effects of the temperature and time of the gelation/aging step on the porosity of the gels, as well as the impact on the overall energetic cost of the process. Data have shown that well-developed micro-mesoporous architectures can be obtained within less than a day. The temperature of the gelation/aging step mainly affects the mesopore network, whereas the microporosity is determined by the composition of the precursor%27s mixture. The exclusion of the solvent exchange step yields soft mechanically fragile porous gels with structural limitations upon carbonization at high temperature in inert atmosphere, due to the surface tensions applied to the backbone during the evolution of volatiles. The mesopore structure lost during carbonization is not recovered upon activation in CO2 atmosphere, but it is preserved upon chemical activation in K2CO3 and the resulting gel exhibits a bimodal micro-mesoporous distribution. Furthermore, the energy savings of this route are similar to those obtained using microwave-heating in terms of grams of xerogel per kilowatt hour of energy consumed for similar textural properties. The correlation between the energy power consumed and the textural parameters is a useful tool to optimize the synthesis. © 2014 Elsevier Inc.
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The sol-gel polymerization of resorcinol/formaldehyde mixtures to obtain porous gels is typically a long process performed throughout several days. In this work, we have explored an experimental approach to reduce the time necessary to obtain porous gels based on mild polymerization conditions and direct drying. We have analyzed the effects of the temperature and time of the gelation/aging step on the porosity of the gels, as well as the impact on the overall energetic cost of the process. Data have shown that well-developed micro-mesoporous architectures can be obtained within less than a day. The temperature of the gelation/aging step mainly affects the mesopore network, whereas the microporosity is determined by the composition of the precursor's mixture. The exclusion of the solvent exchange step yields soft mechanically fragile porous gels with structural limitations upon carbonization at high temperature in inert atmosphere, due to the surface tensions applied to the backbone during the evolution of volatiles. The mesopore structure lost during carbonization is not recovered upon activation in CO2 atmosphere, but it is preserved upon chemical activation in K2CO3 and the resulting gel exhibits a bimodal micro-mesoporous distribution. Furthermore, the energy savings of this route are similar to those obtained using microwave-heating in terms of grams of xerogel per kilowatt hour of energy consumed for similar textural properties. The correlation between the energy power consumed and the textural parameters is a useful tool to optimize the synthesis. © 2014 Elsevier Inc.
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Bimodal pore size distribution; Energetic assessment; Mesoporous gels; Textural characterization Carbon dioxide; Carbonization; Chemical activation; Energy conservation; Gelation; Mesoporous materials; Microwave heating; Mixtures; Polymerization; Pore size; Sol-gel process; Sol-gels; Synthesis (chemical); Xerogels; Bimodal pore size distribution; Energetic assessment; Experimental approaches; Mesoporous gels; Polymerization conditions; Sol-gel polymerization; Textural characterization; Textural parameters; Atmospheric temperature
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