Publication | Open Access
Sound propagation in SiO2 aerogels
86
Citations
0
References
1992
Year
Materials ScienceAeroacousticsEngineeringMechanical PropertiesMicrofabricationPhysical AcousticAir PressureMaterials CharacterizationApplied PhysicsSio2 AerogelsAcoustic MaterialAcoustic PropagationPorosityAcoustic TweezerCarbon AerogelsMacroscopic Aerogel DensityPure Sio2 Aerogels
The longitudinal sound velocity vL of pure SiO2 aerogels with densities in the range of 5 to 500 kg m−3, either made from TEOS (tetraethoxysilane), TMOS (tetramethoxysilane), or waterglass was measured. The variation of vL with density ρ for evacuated aerogels is more complex than described earlier: The simple scaling law vL∝ρα, with α=1.3, only holds for ρ>100 kg m−3; below this density α≊0.8 is valid. Data are also collected for sintered SiO2 aerogels. For specimens with densities around 100 kg m−3 or below, sound velocity measurements under variation of air pressure have also been performed. The dependence of the sound velocity on air pressure can be correctly described by a simple theory involving quasi-isothermal compression of the gas within the pores. From these findings a reliable method to determine the macroscopic aerogel density is derived.