clearly_not_atara
International Hazard
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Homemade aerogel with hexafluoroisopropanol?
Aerogels are produced by supercritical drying. This is because they are prepared in a solvent by precipitation and the ordinary evaporation of a
solvent destroys the nanostructure via surface tension (and freeze-drying would destroy it by crystallization).
However, supercritically drying aerogel with water as the solvent leads to the dissolution of the silica as silicic acid, which is surprising
and inconvenient. So they were dried with alcohols as the solvent. However:
Due to the extreme danger of supercritically drying alcohols, a multi-stage process is used:
* the aerogel is prepared in water
* the water is replaced by alcohol
* this is pressurized
* the alcohol is replaced by CO2
* this is heated to criticality and dried
Unfortunately the fourth step involves replacing a solvent at high pressure, which requires complicated equipment and is difficult to perform at large
scales. Worse, the solvent is flammable. Alcohols or acetone are required as an intermediate solvent because water reacts with carbon dioxide to form
carbonic acid, which makes replacement impossible.
I was thinking for a while about using 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol as a single supercritical drying solvent, replacing both alcohol and CO2. It turns out
that 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol actually has a lower critical pressure than CO2 (48 atmospheres vs 71), but it also happens to be flammable (albeit with a
low flame energy). I switched to hexafluoroisopropanol, which is harder to synthesize but essentially nonflammable. There are two advantages: no
intermediate solvent is required, and the high-pressure apparatus is greatly simplified, as it only needs to be suitable for boiling and not solvent
replacement.
I couldn't find a table that listed the critical properties of hexafluoroisopropanol, but while looking, I found that some Russians had had my idea
two years ago.
It appears that hexafluoroisopropanol shares the low critical pressure (5.0 MPa ≈ 48 atm) and temperature of trifluoroethanol. The paper reports
hexafluoroisopropanol as nonflammable, in accordance with other data. In addition, aerogels dried by HFIP process have hydrophobic surface chemistry
owing to etherification with hexafluoroisopropyl groups.
In fact, it seems like the procedure could be carried out in a home laboratory, as long as sufficient precautions were taken to control emissions of
hexafluoroisopropanol (which is irritating and corrosive). In this study an ordinary autoclave was use to make aerogel.
Anything to watch out for?
[Edited on 6-9-2016 by clearly_not_atara]
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Texium
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Thread Moved 27-11-2023 at 10:50 |
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