| Literature DB >> 29751645 |
Xiaodong Sun1, Guangyan Ma2, Xuliang Lv3, Mingxu Sui4, Huabing Li5, Fan Wu6, Jijun Wang7.
Abstract
In this study, Fe₃O₄/ZnO core⁻shell nanocomposites were synthesized through a chemical method of coating the magnetic core (Fe₃O₄) with ZnO by co-precipitation of Fe₃O₄ with zinc acetate in a basic medium of ammonium hydroxide. The phase structure, morphology and electromagnetic parameters of the Fe₃O₄/ZnO core⁻shell nanocomposites were investigated. The results indicated that the concentration of the solvent was responsible for controlling the morphology of the composites, which further influenced their impedance matching and microwave absorption properties. Moreover, Fe₃O₄/ZnO nanocomposites exhibited an enhanced absorption capacity in comparison with the naked Fe₃O₄ nanospheres. Specifically, the minimum reflection loss value reached −50.79 dB at 4.38 GHz when the thickness was 4.5 mm. It is expected that the Fe₃O₄/ZnO core⁻shell structured nanocomposites could be a promising candidate as high-performance microwave absorbers.Entities:
Keywords: Fe3O4; ZnO; core–shell structure; electromagnetic absorption; interfacial polarization
Year: 2018 PMID: 29751645 PMCID: PMC5978157 DOI: 10.3390/ma11050780
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1The coaxial waveguide instrumentation (a) and the toroidal–shaped sample (b).
Figure 2XRD patterns of and Fe3O4/ZnO composites.
Figure 3XPS spectra of Fe3O4/ZnO nanocomposites: (a) survey spectrum; (b) Fe 2p binding energy spectrum; and (c) Zn 2p binding energy spectrum.
Figure 4The SEM images of Fe3O4 (a); sample A (b); and sample B (c); TEM image (d); HRTEM image (e) of sample A and SAED pattern (f) of sample B, respectively.
Figure 5Frequency dependence on the (a) real part and (b) imaginary part of relative complex permittivity; (c) real part and (d) imaginary part of relative complex permeability.
Figure 6RL curves of paraffin samples containing 50 wt % Fe3O4 (a) and sample A (b); RL curves of paraffin samples containing 30 wt % (c); 50 wt % (d) and 70 wt % (e) sample B, respectively.
Figure 7RL 2-D contour map representations in the frequency range of 2–18 GHz loaded with 50 wt % of sample B.
Figure 8Frequency dependence of C0 (a) and values of attenuation constant of α (b) of sample B in the range of 2–18 GHz.
Figure 9Dielectric loss tangent (a) and magnetic loss tangent (b) of the Fe3O4 and Fe3O4/ZnO (sample B), respectively.
EMW absorption performances of typical Fe3O4-based composites reported in this work and recent literature.
| Sample | wt (%) | Optimum Frequency (GHz) | Minimum RL Value (dB) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SnO2/Fe3O4/MWCNTs | 70 | 10.90 | −42.00 | [ |
| Fe3O4/SiO2/rGO | 20 | 9.70 | −26.60 | [ |
| Fe2O4/MnO2 | 40 | 16.80 | −41.50 | [ |
| Fe3O4@C | 66.7 | 16.20 | −22.60 | [ |
| FePc-Fe3O4-BF | 75 | 5.90 | −31.10 | [ |
| Fe3O4/ZnO | 50 | 4.38 | −50.79 | This work |