Abstract

Chitosan aerogels could be applied potentially in thermal insulation for energy-saving buildings, separation/adsorption, and catalysis. However, disadvantages of chitosan aerogels include their hydrophilicity and low insufficient mechanical strength. Here we propose a silica-phase hybriding route to create chitosan/silica hybrid aerogels with a synergistic capability for favourable hydrophobicity and superior mechanical strength, demonstrating an emergent finding (hydrophobicity optimised with the improved mechanical strength). The aerogels exhibit low drying shrinkage (as low as 13.41 %), lightweight (lowest to 0.149 g cm−1), high-efficient thermal insulation (thermal conductivity as low as to 0.024 W m−1 K−1 at room temperature and normal pressure) either under cryogenic (−196 °C) or high-temperature conditions, exceptional fire-retardancy (self-extinguishing in 1.8 s) and environmentally friendly characteristic (initial mineralisation after 10 d). High hydrophobic property (water contact angle up to 142°) of the aerogels were achieved depending upon 1H, 1H, 2H, 2H-perfluorodecyltriethoxysilane of vapor deposition, presenting a discovery concerning substantial improvement of mechanical properties (up to 0.188 MPa at 5 % strain, increased by 25 %). Furthermore, we demonstrate that a plausible mechanism for simultaneous hydrophobic and mechanical enhancement is depending upon the modulation of networking skeletons at the nanoscale.

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