Microgravity Science - Aerogel in your House

The House of the Future?

Glossary: Aerogel, Super Materials
Aerogel Update 6/12/97: Will Aerogel Let You Put a 24 GigaHertz Computer on Your Desktop by 2006?
June 27, 1997: Hear what scientists are saying about Aerogel! (link to Japan's only 24 hour science and technology news channel - on the web! This link uses RealAudio, text is also printed.)


Aerogel SampleA remarkable, nearly transparent material called aerogel is a dry gel principally made from silica. In the "Technology to Watch" section of Fortune Magazine, the use of aerogels was cited for more than 800 different product applications ranging from satellites to surfboards. As the world's lightest solid, aerogel can save significant weight on future space vehicles. One proposal places solid aerogel tires on the Mars rover - adding weight nearly equivalent to the weight of air in the same space. The photograph at left shows a sample of this twenty-first century material. (see more samples)


nearly transparent aerogel sampleThe most exciting and near term ground application, however, is the contribution of aerogel on a per weight basis as the strongest, lightest and only transparent building material. The material's specifications are the stuff of science fiction. Weighing as little as 3 times that of air, a single inch thickness of this silica-based material has the internal surface area of a basketball court and can protect a human hand from the heat of a blowtorch. The picture at right shows both how strong and how transparent aerogel is. What appears to be a penny is a penny - behind the nearly-transparent aerogel sample.


house of the futureFor windows and skylights, the "holy grail" - according to Chemical and Engineering News - is a transparent aerogel. Current aerogels, as produced on the ground, however, are not completely transparent, but instead have a slight blue haze to them. This blue color arises from the presence of large pores formed during the gellation and the hypothesis currently being tested by the most recent NASA experiments centers on whether a more uniform and therefore transparent gel can be made in space. Since aerogel has the equivalent thermal insulating quality equal to 10-20 glass window panes, the energy conserving effects of an aerogel window replacement would significantly lower heating bills, particularly in Northern climates.

rose shielded by aerogel placed over Bunsen flameThe picture at right demonstrates aerogel's insulating properties: A fresh flower was placed atop a thin sample of aerogel, and placed over a gas flame. The flower was not harmed.

On April 3, 1996, an experimental rocket - a two-stage, solid-fuel Starfire - launched the payload and returned safely to earth with the first piece of extraterrestrially produced aerogel. The confirmed height to low-earth orbit was 200 miles or about 13 miles higher than the Space Shuttle orbits. The results of these experiments, conducted in alliance with Aerojet Corporation and Lawrence Berkeley National Labs, will provide valuable data on the lowest density solid material ever produced, the first space chunk of aerogel, otherwise called "frozen smoke".


Web Links

Aerogel Web Site - More about aerogel research and news
Aerogel and Space Science FAQ

More science stories - NASA space science research
Dr. David Noever, a NASA researcher on the project, adds: "The strictly unscientific term for aerogel is "pet cloud." In the house of the future, aerogel will not replace other pets, but will find a host of places for making life more comfortable. Insulating, clear windows. Large, energy-stingy skylights. Oven door panels. Space-saving refrigerators. Lightweight picnic coolers. Even an aerogel surfboard in the closet. These are just a few of the more imaginative ways that aerogel will place a pet cloud in every House of the Future.


Curator: Bryan Walls
NASA Official: John M. Horack

last update: July, 1998