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  2. Aerogel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerogel

    Aerogels may be used to separate oil from water, which could for example be used to respond to oil spills. [104] [81] [76] Aerogels may be used to disinfect water, killing bacteria. [105] [106] Aerogel can introduce disorder into superfluid helium-3. [107] In aircraft de-icing, a new proposal uses a carbon nanotube aerogel. A thin filament is ...

  3. Aerographene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerographene

    Aerographene or graphene aerogel is the least dense solid known to exist, at 160 g/m 3 (0.0100 lb/cu ft; 0.16 mg/cm 3; 4.3 oz/cu yd). [1] The material reportedly can be produced at the scale of cubic meters.

  4. Boron nitride aerogel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boron_nitride_aerogel

    Boron nitride aerogel is an aerogel made of highly porous boron nitride (BN). It typically consists of a mixture of deformed boron nitride nanotubes and nanosheets . It can have a density as low as 0.6 mg/cm 3 and a specific surface area as high as 1050 m 2 /g, and therefore has potential applications as an absorbent , catalyst support and gas ...

  5. Category:Aerogels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Aerogels

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  6. List of thermal conductivities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_thermal_conductivities

    *5 MPa is 5 ⋅ 10 6 Pascals or 5 ⋅ 10 6 Newtons per meter 2 or about fifty atmospheres pressure. *Solidity ≡ the ratio of the volume of solid to the bulk volume, or the ratio of bulk density to solid grain density d B /d G .

  7. Nanocellulose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanocellulose

    CNCs could also be made to gel in water under low power sonication giving rise to aerogels with the highest reported surface area (>600m2/g) and lowest shrinkage during drying (6.5%) of cellulose aerogels. [66] In another study by Aulin et al., [68] the formation of structured porous aerogels of nanocellulose by freeze-drying was demonstrated ...

  8. Lifting gas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lifting_gas

    The amount of mass that can be lifted by hydrogen in air per unit volume at sea level, equal to the density difference between hydrogen and air, is: (1.292 - 0.090) kg/m 3 = 1.202 kg/m 3. and the buoyant force for one m 3 of hydrogen in air at sea level is: 1 m 3 × 1.202 kg/m 3 × 9.8 N/kg= 11.8 N

  9. Metallic microlattice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metallic_microlattice

    The previous record of 1.0 mg/cm 3 was held by silica aerogels, and aerographite is claimed to have a density of 0.2 mg/cm 3. [11] Mechanically, these microlattices are behaviorally similar to elastomers and almost completely recover their shape after significant compression. [ 12 ]