Silica
aerogels are interesting porous materials with extremely
low density and high surface area, making them advantageous for a
number of aerospace and catalysis applications. Here, we report the
preparation of polydopamine (PDA)-functionalized silica aerogels using
an in situ coating method, wherein the dopamine monomer
was allowed to diffuse through the underlying structure of the gels
in the absence of any external base and polymerize on the surface
of the gel. The use of a siloxane precursor with an amine functionality
decorates the silica backbone, allowing for a superior PDA coating,
as evident in the darker color of PDA-coated amine-functionalized
silica gels than PDA-coated silica-only gels and the X-ray photoelectron
spectroscopy results. Furthermore, by varying the coating time, a
series of aerogels with increasing optical absorption are prepared.
Analyses using Brunauer–Emmett–Teller, scanning electron
microscopy, and pycnometry show that the in situ PDA
coating does not affect the inherent properties of the silica aerogels
as opposed to PDA coatings deposited using an external base. Aerogels
coated for 12 h and 24 h offer a surface area of 614 ± 35 and
658 ± 15 m2/g along with a porosity of 92.6 ±
0.9 and 92.4 ± 0.7%, respectively, properties similar to the
native silica aerogels. PDA-coated aerogels have the potential to
serve as UV ray mitigating materials due to the tortuosity of the
underlying structure and the unique chemical properties of the PDA
coating.
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