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Fabrication of Fully Bio-Based Aerogels via Microcrystalline Cellulose and Hydroxyapatite Nanorods with Highly Effective Flame-Retardant Properties

47

Citations

38

References

2018

Year

Abstract

Hydroxyapatite (HAP) nanorods were synthesized via a facile hydrothermal method, which were used as nanoadditives to prepare the flame-retardant microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) composite aerogels. Flame-retardant and thermal properties of MCC/HAP composite aerogels were evaluated. When tests were performed at room temperature, the composite aerogels exhibited enhanced thermal stability and low thermal conductivity but more rapid thermal dynamic transfer rate during heating and thermal dissipation rate during cooling compared to pure MCC aerogel. The MCC aerogel containing 50 wt % HAP yielded a reduction of 93.7% in peak heat release rate (PHRR), and the smoldering occurred when exposed to a flame or the cone heater. The remarkable improvement in the flame-retardant properties of MCC/HAP should be attributed to these possible mechanisms: (i) the increased thermal dynamic transfer performance during heating has an adverse effect on the increment in time to ignition and time to PHRR; (ii) the nonflammable HAP-backbone aerogel-like residual char with lower thermal conductivity coefficient, which is in situ formed along the temperature gradient during the thermal degradation and combustion processes, exhibits a positive effect on slowing the diffusion of heat and mass as well as the adsorption of smoke. These mechanisms interact as well as compete with others during the thermal degradation or combustion processes.

References

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