Title: aerogel-like materials Example: Drying a surface
1Evolution of NanoPorous Materials from an NSF
IUCRC project to the Real World
- Douglas M. SmithNanoPore Incorporated2501 Alamo
SE Albuquerque, NM 87106 - Smith_at_NanoPore.com
2What is NanoPore?
- 84 issued patents and gt50 pending applications in
porous materials since 1994. - RD production in Albuquerque. RD in
Sunnyvale, CA. Sales distribution in the UK. - Three main commercial businesses
- Bulk nanoporous silica for advanced thermal
insulation. - Nanoporous silica (NanoglassTM) for low K
dielectrics. - NanoCoolTM on-demand adsorption cooling
- Nanoporous, very high capacity desiccants
developed - Being commercialized for controlled temperature
packaging and microclimate (military, HAZMAT,
etc.) cooling.
NanoglassTM is a registered trademark of
Nanoglass LLC NanoCoolTM is a registered
trademark of NanoPore Incorporated
3IUCRC-initiated technology
- Observation that by controlling the internal
surface chemistry of nanoporous materials before
drying, shrinkage could be reversed via
springback - In theory, this would enable the low-cost
production of low-density, aerogel-like
materials - Example Drying a surface modified silica gel rod
(note in compacted state, volume is only 35 of
uncompacted)
25 mm
Wet Wet Dry
4NanoPore time-line
- 1992 Center researchers develop low density,
nanoporous material synthesis, patent filed - 1994 NanoPore formed, focus on bulk and thin
film synthesis - 1995 NIST/ATP award to TI/NanoPore for low k
dielectrics - 1996 University patent issues (5,565,142),
Nanoglass LLC formed as a 50/50 JV with
AlliedSignal for low k - 1998 Cabot purchases Hoechst and NanoPore
process technology, NanoPore starts commercial
thermal insulation production - 1999 Honeywell purchases NanoPores stake in
Nanoglass LLC - 2001 Cool Logistics UK formed to commercialize
thermal insulation/cooling for controlled
temperature packaging - 2003 NanoCool LLC formed as 3-way joint venture
with NanoPore, Cool Logistics and Mead Westvaco
5NanoPorous Silica (NanogelTM)
- NanoPore worked with both Hoechst AG and the
Cabot Corporation to develop a practical process
scheme for ambient pressure, springback - NanoPore demonstrated the first continuous
(rather than batch) process - Applications in thermal insulation, silicone
reinforcement and flatting of paints - NanogelTM yields 30 improvement in thermal
insulation performance over foams and is
translucent - Cabot purchased NanoPores and Hoechsts rights
and has built a semi-works plant in Frankfurt
NanogelTM is a trademark of the Cabot Corporation
6NanoPore Thermal Insulation Business
- 7x improvement with mild vacuum over conventional
insulation. 93 porous, 30-50 nanometer pores - NanoPore produces products for
- Controlled temperature shipping
- Fuel cells
- Microelectronics, electronics, optics
- Aerospace
- Pipelines
- Appliances
- High temperature (exhaust, piping, etc.)
Vacuum packed insulation
7Examples
- Hot water heaters
- Energy reduction (storage) with better insulation
- 2 Fiberglass blanket31
- 1/4 NanoPore VIP46
- Replace 1 of PU with 1 NanoPore VIP74
- Example IR image of ¼ VIP in long-term testing
- Exhaust for the AAAV
- Reduced IR signature
- 650 oC exhaust
250 mm
8NanoglassTM Low k Dielectrics
- IUCRC role Brought together Texas Instruments
(the need and applications knowledge) with
NanoPore (the solution) - Need driven by shrinking dimensions and higher
speeds in semiconductors. Market projected to be
gt500 million by 2008 - Over 50 patents issued. University patent not
relevant! - Honeywell purchased NanoPores interest in
Nanoglass LLC - NanoPore continues to provide RD, technical
support and retains non-microelectronics IP - NanoPore produces two key raw
materials in ultrahigh purity
600 nm thick NanoglassTM film with 1-2 nanometer
pores
NanoglassTM is a trademark of Nanoglass LLC
9NanoPorous Desiccants
- Conventional Desiccants
- Pore volumes are 0.2 to 0.5 cm3/g which limits
capacity. Pores lt 2 nm to enable adsorption at
low humidity. - NanoPorous Desiccants
- High pore volumes (1-3 cm3/g) to enhance sorption
capacity. Requires pores with size of 2-5 nm. - Use in On-demand Adsorption Cooling
- Principle Waters heat of vaporization is 7x
the heat of fusion (ice). - Being commercialized with collaborative tools
learned in IUCRC (i.e. method, not technology)
10Applications for On-demand cooling
- Short-term
- Controlled temperature packaging
- Single-use box coolers to replace gel packs and
dry ice - Market is hundreds of millions of units with
value of 5-30/unit - Beverages
- In can, bottle and juice pouch
- Market is billions of units with value of
lt0.50/unit - Personal cooling
- Cooling of soldiers, rescue workers, athletes,
etc. - Market is lt1 million units and the value varies
but is high - Longer-term
- Peak load cooling of cars and buildings
- Advanced consumer packaging
11Typical Performance of a NanoCoolTM system
Simply actuated by pressing button
12A logistics comparison
- Conventional EPS/gel pack technology
- Order in gel packs 48 hr before shipment
- High shipping costs of raw materials
- Inventory large volumes
- Freeze gel for48 hr.
- Freezer space and energy
- Pack and ship
- High shipping costs
- End-user disposal
- Difficult because of large volume/low value
- NanoCoolTM-based packaging
- Order in cooler
- Pack, actuate and ship
- Reduced shipping costs
- End-user disposal
- Costs are lower since volume is low and higher
value - Recycle
13Beverage cooling
- Cooling of 315 ml using a self-contained
adsorption cooler. 200-250 W for 2-3 min. - Cooling flux gt7,000 W/m2
- Automatic, depressurization-driven valve
developed - Pilot line for 100 devices/min has been designed
14Micro-climate Cooling
- Market Rescue workers, firemen, soldiers,
steelworkers, etc. - Design goals
- 180 W cooling, 1 hr duration
- On demand, variable cooling
- Small form factor
- Light weight
- Heat rejected to ambient air
- Integrated with liquid circulation, cooling
garment
15What the University/Center did right and wrong
- Wrong
- Horrible patent. No IP search, no knowledge of
the patent space, short-term focus on generating
a patent rather than a viable patent. - Focused only on Center membership as a means to
benefit - Did not generate any political value out of
spin-off successes
- Right
- Supported quickly filing a patent
- Executed a IP contract which ensured there were
no IP conflicts (in exchange for ) - Agreed not to take an equity stake
- Realized the main benefit was job creation