Current methods to create carbon foam run into difficulties when trying to make the product strong, lightweight, environmentally friendly and low-cost.
Carbon foams have a 3D network that allows them to be lightweight, tolerant of high temperatures and adjustable in their thermal and electrical properties.
Many different materials, such as graphene sheets - 2D layers of carbon atoms - and biomass such as banana peels can be used to make these foams, but they are not very stable, are costly to make or have varied inner structures that cannot be adjusted.
Using a bread recipe as a guide, the group began by mixing flour, yeast and water, then kneading and baking the dough.
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The researchers then used a laboratory tube furnace under argon gas conditions to carbonise the product into a hard foam.
They tested the foam using several spectroscopy methods and found that it is mechanically stiff, can shield against electromagnetic interference and is much less flammable than current carbon foams.
Importantly, this cheap, easy-to-make foam's inner pore structure can be tuned by changing the amounts of yeast and water, which would allow it to be used for a variety of different applications.