Nature Communications (Sep 2023)

Large-scale assembly of isotropic nanofiber aerogels based on columnar-equiaxed crystal transition

  • Lei Li,
  • Yiqian Zhou,
  • Yang Gao,
  • Xuning Feng,
  • Fangshu Zhang,
  • Weiwei Li,
  • Bin Zhu,
  • Ze Tian,
  • Peixun Fan,
  • Minlin Zhong,
  • Huichang Niu,
  • Shanyu Zhao,
  • Xiaoding Wei,
  • Jia Zhu,
  • Hui Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41087-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Ice-templating technology holds great potential to construct industrial porous materials from nanometers to the macroscopic scale for tailoring thermal, electronic, or acoustic transport. Herein, we describe a general ice-templating technology through freezing the material on a rotating cryogenic drum surface, crushing it, and then re-casting the nanofiber slurry. Through decoupling the ice nucleation and growth processes, we achieved the columnar-equiaxed crystal transition in the freezing procedure. The highly random stacking and integrating of equiaxed ice crystals can organize nanofibers into thousands of repeating microscale units with a tortuous channel topology. Owing to the spatially well-defined isotropic structure, the obtained Al2O3·SiO2 nanofiber aerogels exhibit ultralow thermal conductivity, superelasticity, good damage tolerance, and fatigue resistance. These features, together with their natural stability up to 1200 °C, make them highly robust for thermal insulation under extreme thermomechanical environments. Cascading thermal runaway propagation in a high-capacity lithium-ion battery module consisting of LiNi0.8Co0.1Mn0.1O2 cathode, with ultrahigh thermal shock power of 215 kW, can be completely prevented by a thin nanofiber aerogel layer. These findings not only establish a general production route for nanomaterial assemblies that is conventionally challenging, but also demonstrate a high-energy-density battery module configuration with a high safety standard that is critical for practical applications.