JOURNAL ARTICLE

Cellulose‐Based Biotemplated Silica Structuring

Daniel Van OpdenboschCordt Zollfrank

Year: 2014 Journal:   Advanced Engineering Materials Vol: 16 (6)Pages: 699-712   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

There are many examples in nature where inorganic and organic phases are intricately connected to each other, both in form and function. Mineral phases impart increased mechanical strength as well as biological‐, chemical‐ and thermal resistance to natural organic structures. This is achieved by the provision of complex hierarchical structuring to the minerals by the biological tissue. The most important biopolymer cellulose has found numerous applications from assisting ceramic processing over composite manufacturing to biotemplating of ceramics. The pairing of cellulose and silica produced materials ranging from cellulose‐assisted preceramic green bodies via cellulose‐silica composite aerogels to biotemplated high‐surface and hierarchically nanostructured silica materials.

Keywords:
Cellulose Materials science Biopolymer Ceramic Structuring Composite number Composite material Chemical engineering Polymer science Polymer

Metrics

18
Cited By
0.83
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
231
Refs
0.72
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Diatoms and Algae Research
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Biomaterials
Building materials and conservation
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Earth-Surface Processes
Aerogels and thermal insulation
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Spectroscopy
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