High power ultrasound applied to liquids produces cavities that attain very high temperatures and pressures ("hot spots"). When an alkoxide/water mixture is sonicated, the cavities act as nanoreactors, where the hydrolysis reaction starts. The products (alcohol, water, and silanol) help continue the dissolution of that immiscible mixture. The reactions depend on catalyst content, temperature bath, and alkyl group length. When the resultant sonosol gels, it produces a sonogel; it is denser, with finer and more homogeneous porosity than that of a classic counterpart. Thus, acoustic cavitation makes it possible to obtain nanostructured materials. Sono-aerogels have a high surface-to-volume ratio and are built by small particles (~1 nm radius) and a highly cross-linked network with low surface coverage of -OH radicals. The processing as well as their short-range order at an atomic scale and at a micrometric scale is presented in this chapter. Finally, these materials find application, among others as biomaterials for tissue engineering and for CO 2 sequestration.
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