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51

ZEB

annual report 2014

Glass materials are used extensively in

today’s buildings, and the use will probably

increase even more in the coming years.

Large window and glazing areas are often

preferred, e.g. with respect to daylight

admittance and visual expressions. On the

other hand, windows may also be responsible

for large heat losses from buildings and

contrary overheating of buildings from

incoming solar radiation. Thus, the various

properties of glass materials will be very

important. Furthermore, it will also be of

crucial interest if it is possible to improve these

properties significantly. That is, for future

glass materials and their application in e.g.

zero energy and zero emission buildings, it

will be important to address properties related

to e.g. solar radiation throughput, thermal

conductivity, mass density and mechanical

strength.

Hence, the objective of our study presented

herein has been to attempt to develop a new

aerogel glass material for energy-efficient

buildings with low mass density, low thermal

conductivity, high visible transparency and

satisfactory high mechanical strength.

Experimentally, in short, new aerogel glass

materials were successfully prepared by

sintering monolithic silica aerogel precursors

at elevated temperatures (Gao et al. 2014ab).

These new aerogel glass materials were

characterized by high visible transparency (T

vis

≈ 91 – 96 % at 500 nm) (Fig.1), low thermal

conductivity (k≈ 0.17 – 0.18 W/(mK)) (Fig.2),

low mass density (ρ ≈ 1.60 – 1.79 kg/dm

3

),

and enhanced mechanical strength (typical

elastic modulus Er ≈ 2.0 – 6.4 GPa and

hardness H = 0.23 – 0.53 GPa).

These new and improved properties,

summarized in Table 1, were derived

from a series of successive gelation and

ageing steps during the desiccation of

silica aerogels. The involved ”sol → gel

→ glass” transformation was investigated

by means of thermo-gravimetric analysis

(TGA), scanning electron microscopy (SEM),

nanoindentation, and Fourier transform

infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Strategies of

improving further the mechanical strength

of the obtained aerogel glass materials

are also being discussed. As compared to

monolithic silica aerogels that have a typical

thermal conductivity of about 0.013 W/(mK),

there seems to be a huge potential to further

decrease the thermal conductivity and thus

enhance the thermal insulation performance

of aerogel glass materials by optimizing

their structural properties, such as the

The future glass materials may be a

lot different from today’s materials...

LIGHTWEIGHT AEROGEL GLASS

|

LETT AEROGEL GLASS

Tao Gao (NTNU) and Bjørn Petter Jelle (NTNU and SINTEF)