Abstract

Abstract Modern materials science has witnessed the era of advanced fabrication methods to engineer functionality from the nano‐ to macroscales. Versatile fabrication and additive manufacturing methods are developed, but the ability to design a material for a given application is still limited. Here, a novel strategy that enables target‐oriented manufacturing of ultra‐lightweight aerogels with on‐demand characteristics is introduced. The process relies on controllable liquid templating through interfacial complexation to generate tunable, stimuli‐responsive 3D‐structured (multiphase) filamentous liquid templates. The methodology involves nanoscale chemistry and microscale assembly of nanoparticles (NPs) at liquid–liquid interfaces to produce hierarchical macroscopic aerogels featuring multiscale porosity, ultralow density (3.05–3.41 mg cm −3 ), and high compressibility (90%) combined with elastic resilience and instant shape recovery. The challenges are overcome facing ultra‐lightweight aerogels, including poor mechanical integrity and the inability to form predefined 3D constructs with on‐demand functionality, for a multitude of applications. The controllable nature of the coined methodology enables tunable electromagnetic interference shielding with high specific shielding effectiveness (39 893 dB cm 2 g −1 ), and one of the highest‐ever reported oil‐absorption capacities (487 times the initial weight of aerogel for chloroform), to be obtained. These properties originate from the engineerable nature of liquid templating, pushing the boundaries of lightweight materials to systematic function design and applications.

Keywords:
Materials science Aerogel Microscale chemistry Fabrication Nanotechnology Porosity Template Nanoengineering Electromagnetic shielding Nanoparticle Nanoscopic scale Composite material

Metrics

42
Cited By
4.57
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
31
Refs
0.94
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Electromagnetic wave absorption materials
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Advanced Antenna and Metasurface Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Aerospace Engineering
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