| Literature DB >> 31712667 |
Touseef Habib1, Nutan Patil1, Xiaofei Zhao1, Evan Prehn2, Muhammad Anas1, Jodie L Lutkenhaus1,2, Miladin Radovic2, Micah J Green3,4.
Abstract
Here we report for the first time that Ti3C2Tx/polymer composite films rapidly heat when exposed to low-power radio frequency fields. Ti3C2Tx MXenes possess a high dielectric loss tangent, which is correlated with this rapid heating under electromagnetic fields. Thermal imaging confirms that these structures are capable of extraordinary heating rates (as high as 303 K/s) that are frequency- and concentration-dependent. At high loading (and high conductivity), Ti3C2Tx MXene composites do not heat under RF fields due to reflection of electromagnetic waves, whereas composites with low conductivity do not heat due to the lack of an electrical percolating network. Composites with an intermediate loading and a conductivity between 10-1000 S m-1 rapidly generate heat under RF fields. This finding unlocks a new property of Ti3C2Tx MXenes and a new material for potential RF-based applications.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31712667 PMCID: PMC6848125 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-52972-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Schematic of the RF apparatus and the Ti3C2Tx MXene composite sample, (b) same schematic but with the RF fringing field turned on which heats the sample (observed using an FLIR camera), (c) FLIR image of a 25 wt.% composite, and (d) plot of the heating rate vs. frequency to determine the resonant frequency (highest heating rate) of each sample.
Figure 2(a) Conductivity at each composition for Day 0 (fresh), (b) temperature vs time graph for 25 wt% composite sample on Day 0 and at 1 W; the error bar for each measurement is the standard deviation from Tavg, (c) the rise in temperature for each Day 0 sample (at 1 W and 3 W) vs composition, (d) the rise in temperature for each Day 0 sample (at 1 W and 3 W) vs conductivity.
Figure 3(a) Conductivity of Day 0 and Day 30 samples, and (b) temperature rise for Day 0 and Day 30 samples at 1 W, (c) temperature rise for Day 0 and Day 30 samples at 3 W.
Figure 4Thermal cycling protocol was 30 second with RF on followed by 30 second of RF off (1 cycle); this was repeated for 50 cycles on Day 0 at 3 W for (a) 5 wt.% sample, (b) 10 wt% sample, (c) 50 wt.% sample. The first 300 seconds of (d) 5 wt.% sample, (e) 10 wt.% sample, (f) 50 wt.% sample.