Guinness Records Names Aerogel World's Lightest Solid
5/07/02
A new version of aerogel, the substance that will be used to capture particles from comet Wild 2
in 2004 by the Stardust spacecraft, has been recognized by Guinness World Records as the solid with
the lowest density.
Dr. Steven Jones of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., a materials scientist who
developed the aerogel used by Stardust, created a version that weighs only 3 milligrams per cubic
centimeter. This beat out the previous record holder, an aerogel that weighed 5 milligrams per cubic
centimeter. The team received the official certificate yesterday.
Aerogel
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Described as a solid smoke because it's 99.8 percent air, aerogel is actually a stiff foam made from
silicon dioxide and sand - the same ingredients that make glass. However, aerogel is 1,000 times less
dense than glass. Its amazing properties make it extremely lighteight but incredibly strong, able to
withstand pressure thousands of times higher than its own mass. It melts only when temperatures hit 2200
degrees F (1200 C).
Aerogel is prepared like gelatin by mixing a liquid silicon compound and a fast-evaporating liquid solvent,
forming a gel that is then dried in an instrument similar to a pressure cooker. The mixture thickens, and then
careful heating and depressurizing produce a glassy sponge of silicon.
"It's probably not possible to make aerogel any lighter than this because then it wouldn't gel," Jones said.
"The molecules of silicon wouldn't connect. And it's not possible to make it lighter than the density of air, 1.2
milligrams per cubic centimeter, because aerogel is filled with air." To change the density, Jones simply changes
the amount of silicon in the initial mixture.
Scientist Samual Kistler invented the original Aerogel, in 1932. Monsanto bought the rights to the material and
underutilized it as an insulator in picnic coolers and as a thickening agent in napalm bombs. JPL realized the
properties of aerogel made it ideal for space travel. NASA used aerogel for thermal insulation on the Mars Pathfinder
mission. It will also be used on the 2003 Mars Exploration Rover, and may aid a proposed fundamental-physics testing
mission and the Mars Scout Program.
Click here for more information about aerogel and Stardust.
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