| Literature DB >> 28696564 |
Zhihui Zeng1,2, Hao Jin1, Mingji Chen1, Weiwei Li1,2, Licheng Zhou3, Xiao Xue1,4, Zhong Zhang1.
Abstract
Multiwalled carbon nanotube/polymer composites with aligned and isotropic micropores are constructed by a facile ice-templated freeze-drying method in a wide density range, with controllable types and contents of the nanoscale building blocks, in order to tune the shielding performance together with the considerable mechanical and electrical properties. Under the mutual promotion of the frame and porous structure, the lightweight high-performance shielding is achieved: a 2.3 mm thick sample can reach 46.7 and 21.7 dB in the microwave X-band while the density is merely 32.3 and 9.0 mg cm-3 , respectively. The lowest density corresponds to a value of shielding effectiveness divided by both the density and thickness up to 104 dB cm2 g-1 , far beyond the conductive polymer composites with other fillers ever reported. The shielding mechanism of the flexible porous materials is further demonstrated by an in situ compression experiment.Entities:
Keywords: electromagnetic interference shielding; lightweight structures; nanocomposites; porous architectures; size effects
Year: 2017 PMID: 28696564 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201701388
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281