Study of the surfactant role in latex-aerogel systems by scanning transmission electron microscopy on aqueous suspensions.
A PerretG ForayKarine Masenelli-VarlotE MaireB YrieixPublished in: Journal of microscopy (2017)
For insulation applications, boards thinner than 2 cm are under design with specific thermal conductivities lower than 15 mW m-1 K-1 . This requires binding slightly hydrophobic aerogels which are highly nanoporous granular materials. To reach this step and ensure insulation board durability at the building scale, it is compulsory to design, characterise and analyse the microstructure at the nanoscale. It is indeed necessary to understand how the solid material is formed from a liquid suspension. This issue is addressed in this paper through wet-STEM experiments carried out in an Environmental Scanning Electron Microscope (ESEM). Latex-surfactant binary blends and latex-surfactant-aerogel ternary systems are studied, with two different surfactants of very different chemical structures. Image analysis is used to distinguish the different components and get quantitative morphological parameters which describe the sample architecture. The evolution of such morphological parameters during water evaporation permits a good understanding of the role of the surfactant.