TY - JOUR
T1 - Fabrication of ultralight helical porous carbon fibers with CNTs-confined Ni nanoparticles for enhanced microwave absorption
AU - Wu, Fei
AU - Liu, Zihao
AU - Xiu, Tao
AU - Zhu, Baolei
AU - Khan, Idrees
AU - Liu, Pei
AU - Zhang, Qiuyu
AU - Zhang, Baoliang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2021/6/15
Y1 - 2021/6/15
N2 - It is extraordinarily difficult to develop low-cost and lightweight microwave absorbing materials that meet the needs of modern technology. Making rational use of biomass to prepare microwave absorbers is a sustainable way. Herein, we develop the catalytic self-deposition (CSD) technology and fabricate ultralight magnetic helical porous carbon fibers (MHPFs) with surface-grown carbon nanotubes (CNTs). There is no need to use expensive, flammable and explosive exogenous gases, avoiding the high energy consumption and potential safety issues faced by traditional energy-intensive catalytic chemical vapor deposition (CCVD) processes. The combined use of in-situ dipping and CSD technology realizes the in-situ growth and morphology control of CNTs encapsulated Ni nanocatalysts. Owing to the sophisticated structure, large specific surface area, complementary loss mechanisms and well-matched impedance, MHPFs exhibit exceptional microwave absorption performance. Notably, under the ultralow filler loading (5%), the strongest reflection loss (RL) exceeds −55.39 dB at 8.4 GHz, and the maximum absorption bandwidth (EAB, RL < −10 dB) reaches 4.7 GHz at the matching thickness of 2.00 mm. The study might shed light on the ultralow filler loadings and low-cost preparation of efficient microwave absorbers.
AB - It is extraordinarily difficult to develop low-cost and lightweight microwave absorbing materials that meet the needs of modern technology. Making rational use of biomass to prepare microwave absorbers is a sustainable way. Herein, we develop the catalytic self-deposition (CSD) technology and fabricate ultralight magnetic helical porous carbon fibers (MHPFs) with surface-grown carbon nanotubes (CNTs). There is no need to use expensive, flammable and explosive exogenous gases, avoiding the high energy consumption and potential safety issues faced by traditional energy-intensive catalytic chemical vapor deposition (CCVD) processes. The combined use of in-situ dipping and CSD technology realizes the in-situ growth and morphology control of CNTs encapsulated Ni nanocatalysts. Owing to the sophisticated structure, large specific surface area, complementary loss mechanisms and well-matched impedance, MHPFs exhibit exceptional microwave absorption performance. Notably, under the ultralow filler loading (5%), the strongest reflection loss (RL) exceeds −55.39 dB at 8.4 GHz, and the maximum absorption bandwidth (EAB, RL < −10 dB) reaches 4.7 GHz at the matching thickness of 2.00 mm. The study might shed light on the ultralow filler loadings and low-cost preparation of efficient microwave absorbers.
KW - Biomass-derived carbon
KW - Catalytic self-deposition
KW - Chiral structure
KW - Magnetic material
KW - Microwave absorber
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85103429571&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.compositesb.2021.108814
DO - 10.1016/j.compositesb.2021.108814
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85103429571
SN - 1359-8368
VL - 215
JO - Composites Part B: Engineering
JF - Composites Part B: Engineering
M1 - 108814
ER -