Abstract
Regulating dielectric genes of hollow metal-organic frameworks is a milestone project for microwave absorption (MA). However, there is still a bottleneck in deciphering the contribution of various dielectric genes, making it hard to expand the MA potential from selective encoding gene sequences. Herein, a custom-made proton tailoring strategy is used to build a controllable cavity, and meticulously designed thermodynamic regulation promotes the rearrangement of carbon atoms from disorder to order, thus enhancing the characteristics of charge transfer. Meanwhile, the defect-configuration transformation from heteroatom to vacancy and geometric configuration of hollow structure increase the polarization-related dielectric genes. Therefore, MA performance is enhanced towards broadband absorption (6.6 GHz, 1.78 mm) and high-efficiency loss (−62.5 dB), making samples suitable for complex open electromagnetic environments. This work realizes the tradeoff between dielectric gene sequences and provides a profound insight into the functions and sources of various microwave loss mechanisms.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 100091 |
| Journal | Advanced Powder Materials |
| Volume | 2 |
| Issue number | 1 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Jan 2023 |
Keywords
- Dielectric genes
- Hollow structure
- MOFs
- Microwave absorption
- N-doped C/Co-QDs
- Proton tailoring
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