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  4. Dimensional and structural control of silica aerogel membranes for miniaturized motionless gas pumps
 
research article

Dimensional and structural control of silica aerogel membranes for miniaturized motionless gas pumps

Zhao, Shanyu
•
Jiang, Bo  
•
Maeder, Thomas  
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2015
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces

With growing public interest in portable electronics such as micro fuel cells, micro gas total analysis systems, and portable medical devices, the need for miniaturized air pumps with minimal electrical power consumption is on the rise. Thus, the development and downsizing of next-generation thermal transpiration gas pumps has been investigated intensively during the last decades. Such a system relies on a mesoporous membrane that generates a thermomolecular pressure gradient under the action of an applied temperature bias. However, the development of highly miniaturized active membrane materials with tailored porosity and optimized pumping performance remains a major challenge. Here we report a systematic study on the manufacturing of aerogel membranes using an optimized, minimal-shrinkage sol–gel process, leading to low thermal conductivity and high air conductance. This combination of properties results in superior performance for miniaturized thermomolecular air pump applications. The engineering of such aerogel membranes, which implies pore structure control and chemical surface modification, requires both chemical processing know-how and a detailed understanding of the influence of the material properties on the spatial flow rate density. Optimal pumping performance was found for devices with integrated membranes with a density of 0.062 g cm–3 and an average pore size of 142.0 nm. Benchmarking of such low-density hydrophobic active aerogel membranes gave an air flow rate density of 3.85 sccm·cm–2 at an operating temperature of 400 °C. Such a silica aerogel membrane based system has shown more than 50% higher pumping performance when compared to conventional transpiration pump membrane materials as well as the ability to withstand higher operating temperatures (up to 440 °C). This study highlights new perspectives for the development of miniaturized thermal transpiration air pumps while offering insights into the fundamentals of molecular pumping in three-dimensional open-mesoporous materials. Keywords: aerogel membrane; miniaturized gas pump; sodium silicate; low-temperature cofired ceramics; Knudsen flow

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/acsami.5b05462
Web of Science ID

WOS:000360322000072

Author(s)
Zhao, Shanyu
Jiang, Bo  
Maeder, Thomas  
Muralt, Paul  
Kim, Nayoung
Matam, Santhosh Kumar
Jeong, Eunho
Han, Yen-Lin
Koebel, Matthias M.
Date Issued

2015

Publisher

Amer Chemical Soc

Published in
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
Volume

7

Issue

33

Start page

18803

End page

18814

Subjects

couches épaisses

•

thick-film technology

•

LTCC

•

aérogel

•

aerogel

•

micropompes

•

micropumps

•

microfluidique

•

microfluidics

•

transpiration

•

effet Knudsen

•

Knudsen effect

Note

Collaboration with EMPA

Editorial or Peer reviewed

NON-REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LPM  
LC  
Available on Infoscience
September 11, 2015
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/117774
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