TY - JOUR
T1 - 3D printing “wire-on-sphere” hierarchical SiC nanowires / SiC whiskers foam for efficient high-temperature electromagnetic wave absorption
AU - Lv, Xinyuan
AU - Ye, Fang
AU - Cheng, Laifei
AU - Zhang, Litong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021
PY - 2022/5/20
Y1 - 2022/5/20
N2 - Electromagnetic wave absorption (EWA) materials for use in extreme environments are of great interest. Herein, SiC nanowires / SiC whiskers (SiCnw/SiCw) foam with unique “wire-on-sphere” hierarchical structure was developed for efficient high-temperature EWA. SiCw were assembled to porous SiCw spheres via spray drying and then SiCw spheres were 3D printed to SiCw foam. The catalyst-free precursor infiltration pyrolysis process was first developed to ensure that SiCnw can intentionally grow in situ on the surface of SiCw spheres, thereby achieving “wire-on-sphere” hierarchical structure foam. At room-temperature, the maximum electromagnetic wave effective absorption bandwidth (EABmax) and minimum electromagnetic wave reflection coefficient (RCmin) of SiCnw/SiCw foam can reach 4 GHz and -57 dB, respectively. At 600 °C, the EABmax and RCmin were 3 GHz and -15 dB, respectively. Furthermore, even oxidized at 1000–1500 °C, SiCnw/SiCw foam can still retain EABmax ranging from 2.7 to 3.9 GHz and RCmin ranging from -16 dB to -64 dB, because the formation of SiO2 layer with appropriate thickness can boost interfacial polarization and regulate impedance matching. The SiCnw/SiCw foam also shows the flexural strength as high as 17.05 MPa. All results demonstrate that the SiCnw/SiCw foam is a promising EWA material for applications of harsh environments. And the material-independent “wire-on-sphere” hierarchical structure and its novel preparation process should find the widespread use in the design and fabrication of high-efficiency EWA micro-nano materials.
AB - Electromagnetic wave absorption (EWA) materials for use in extreme environments are of great interest. Herein, SiC nanowires / SiC whiskers (SiCnw/SiCw) foam with unique “wire-on-sphere” hierarchical structure was developed for efficient high-temperature EWA. SiCw were assembled to porous SiCw spheres via spray drying and then SiCw spheres were 3D printed to SiCw foam. The catalyst-free precursor infiltration pyrolysis process was first developed to ensure that SiCnw can intentionally grow in situ on the surface of SiCw spheres, thereby achieving “wire-on-sphere” hierarchical structure foam. At room-temperature, the maximum electromagnetic wave effective absorption bandwidth (EABmax) and minimum electromagnetic wave reflection coefficient (RCmin) of SiCnw/SiCw foam can reach 4 GHz and -57 dB, respectively. At 600 °C, the EABmax and RCmin were 3 GHz and -15 dB, respectively. Furthermore, even oxidized at 1000–1500 °C, SiCnw/SiCw foam can still retain EABmax ranging from 2.7 to 3.9 GHz and RCmin ranging from -16 dB to -64 dB, because the formation of SiO2 layer with appropriate thickness can boost interfacial polarization and regulate impedance matching. The SiCnw/SiCw foam also shows the flexural strength as high as 17.05 MPa. All results demonstrate that the SiCnw/SiCw foam is a promising EWA material for applications of harsh environments. And the material-independent “wire-on-sphere” hierarchical structure and its novel preparation process should find the widespread use in the design and fabrication of high-efficiency EWA micro-nano materials.
KW - 3D printing
KW - High-temperature electromagnetic wave absorption
KW - SiC nanowires
KW - SiC whiskers
KW - “wire-on-sphere” hierarchical structure
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85118823134&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jmst.2021.08.054
DO - 10.1016/j.jmst.2021.08.054
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85118823134
SN - 1005-0302
VL - 109
SP - 94
EP - 104
JO - Journal of Materials Science and Technology
JF - Journal of Materials Science and Technology
ER -