Aerogels are most attractive for thermal clothing. However, mechanical fragility and structural instability restrict their practical applications. These issues are overcome by developing industrial scale sea-island melt-spun ultrafine fibers with large and uniform length-to-diameter as building blocks, which are assembled into aerogel felts with corrugated lamellar structure through freeze-shaping technology. These aerogels possess excellent mechanical properties to meet fabric elasticity and comfort needs, including super-flexibility (25% tensile strain, 95% compression, 180° bending performance) and fatigue resistance of over 10,000 cycles. The aerogels are also self-cleaning, waterproof, breathable, and flame-retardant, making them suitable for application requirements in extreme environments. Moreover, the obtained aerogel felt clothing exhibits excellent thermal insulation properties close to that of dry air, and is only one-third as thick as down clothing with similar insulating properties. Expanding sea-island melt-spun fiber to construct aerogel in this strategy provides scalable potential for developing multifunctional insulating aerogel clothing.
Keywords: aerogel felt clothing; high aspect ratio fiber building blocks; sea‐island melt spinning; thermal insulation; ultra‐flexible aerogel felt.
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