JOURNAL ARTICLE

Direct Synthesis of Polyimide Curly Nanofibrous Aerogels for High‐Performance Thermal Insulation Under Extreme Temperature

Abstract

Abstract Maintaining human body temperature is one of the basic needs for living, which requires high‐performance thermal insulation materials to prevent heat exchange with external environment. However, the most widely used fibrous thermal insulation materials always suffer from the heavy weight, weak mechanical property, and moderate capacity to suppress heat transfer, resulting in limited personal cold and thermal protection performance. Here, an ultralight, mechanically robust, and thermally insulating polyimide (PI) aerogel is directly synthesized via constructing 3D interlocked curly nanofibrous networks during electrospinning. Controlling the solution/water molecule interaction enables the rapid phase inversion of charged jets, while the multiple jets are ejected by regulating charge density of the fluids, thus synergistically allowing numerous curly nanofibers to interlock and cross‐link with each other to form porous aerogel structure. The resulted PI aerogel integrates the ultralight property with density of 2.4 mg cm −3 , extreme temperature tolerance (mechanical robustness over −196 to 300 °C), and thermal insulation performance with ultralow thermal conductivity of 22.4 mW m −1 K −1 , providing an ideal candidate to keep human thermal comfort under extreme temperature. This work can provide a source of inspiration for the design and development of nanofibrous aerogels for various applications.

Keywords:
Aerogel Materials science Thermal insulation Polyimide Nanofiber Composite material Thermal conductivity Thermal Electrospinning Polymer Layer (electronics)

Metrics

91
Cited By
18.79
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
54
Refs
1.00
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Aerogels and thermal insulation
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Spectroscopy
Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Supercapacitor Materials and Fabrication
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.