Synthesis of monolithic shape-stabilized phase change materials with high mechanical stability via a porogen-assisted in situ sol-gel process

RSC Adv. 2020 Jan 16;10(6):3072-3083. doi: 10.1039/c9ra10631f.

Abstract

The confinement of phase change materials (PCMs) in construction materials has recently solved leakage, supercooling and low thermal conductivity problems in the industrial use of PCMs as monolithic thermal energy storage materials. To produce shape-stabilized PCMs (ss-PCMs) as crack-free monoliths, less than 15-30% v/v pure or encapsulated PCMs can be used in construction materials. Therefore, the heat storage capacity of these monolithic ss-PCM boards is comparatively low. In this study, we synthesized a novel class of monolithic ss-PCM boards with high compressive strength of 0.7 MPa at 30 °C (1.2 MPa at 10 °C), high PCM loadings of 86 wt%, and latent heats in the range of 100 J g-1 via a porogen-assisted in situ sol-gel process. We confined butyl stearate (BS) as PCM in a core-shell-like silica matrix via stabilized silica sol as silica source, sodium dodecyl sulfate as surfactant and poly(vinyl alcohol) as co-polymer. The ss-PCMs obtained are hydrophobic, thermally stable up to 320 °C and perform 6000 state transitions from solid to liquid and vice versa, without losing melting or freezing enthalpies. We analyzed the silica structure in the ss-PCMs to understand in detail the reasons for the high mechanical stability. The silica structure in ss-PCMs consists of spherical meso- and macropores up to 10 000 nm filled with PCM, formed mostly by BS droplets in water as templates during gelation. With an increasing BS amount in the synthesis of ss-PCMs, the total nanopore volume filled with PCM in ss-PCMs increases, resulting in higher compressive strengths up to 500% and thermal conductivities up to 60%.