| Literature DB >> 35558962 |
Jixing Chai1,2, Deqing Zhang1,2, Junye Cheng3,4, Yixuan Jia2, Xuewei Ba2, Ya Gao5, Lei Zhu6, Hao Wang3, Maosheng Cao7.
Abstract
Two-dimensional (2D) MoS2/graphene nanosheet (MoS2/GN) hybrids have been demonstrated to be promising microwave absorption (MA) materials due to their unique chemical and physical properties as well as rich impedance matching. However, the reported strategies for preparing MoS2/GN hybrids have limited their application potential due to the complex, high-cost and inefficient preparation processes. On the other hand, it is of note that the main source of graphene is based on converting insulating graphene oxides (GO) back to conductive reduced graphene oxides (RGO). Thus, the MA performance of obtained MoS2/RGO nanohybrids is greatly affected by the conversion process of GO. In this work, we prepared the MoS2/GN hybrids by a facile hydrothermal method with directly introducing highly pure and electroconductive GNs. It is found that the highest reflection loss value of the sample-wax containing 40% MoS2/GN is -57.31 dB at a thickness of 2.58 mm, and the bandwidth of RL values less than -10 dB can reach up to 12.28 GHz (from 5.72 to 18 GHz) when an appropriate absorber thickness between 1.5 and 4 mm is chosen. The excellent MA performances emanate from effective conjugation of MoS2 with GN (Mo-C bond between the interfaces), which provides the dielectric loss caused by multi-relaxation, conductance, and polarization. Taking into account the facile synthesis route and their excellent MA performance, the MoS2/GNs hybrid nanosheets and those composite materials with similar isomorphic hetero-structures are very promising for a wide range of MA applications. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 35558962 PMCID: PMC9088970 DOI: 10.1039/c8ra08086k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Scheme 1Synthetic route for the MoS2/GN hybrids.
Fig. 1(a) X-ray powder diffraction (XRD) patterns for MoS2 and MoS2/GN; (b) Raman spectrum for MoS2/GN.
Fig. 2TEM images of MoS2 (a); GN (b); MoS2/GN (c); HRTEM image of MoS2/GN (d).
Fig. 3XPS spectra of the MoS2/GN samples: overall spectrum as marked (a); Mo 3d (b); S 2p (c); C 1s (d).
Fig. 4RL curves of MoS2 and MoS2/GN composites mixed with paraffin with different loading (thickness: 2.5 mm, frequency: 2–18 GHz).
Fig. 5RL curves and 3D plots for MoS2/GN–wax (a); GN–wax (b); and MoS2–wax (c) composites.
Fig. 6The complex permittivity (a); and complex permeability (b); the dielectric loss (c) and the values of C0 = μ′′(μ′)−2f−1 (d) in the range of 2–18 GHz for MoS2 and MoS2/GN composites.
Fig. 7The cole–cole plot of MoS2 (a) and MoS2/GN (b).
Fig. 8(a) Impedance matching of MoS2/GN; (b) defects and defects polarization of GN; interface polarization of MoS2/GN; (c) electron hopping of MoS2/GN; (d) multiple scattering of MoS2/GN.
Electromagnetic wave absorption performance of MA materials
| Method | Thickness (mm) | Minimum RL value (dB) | Loading ratio (wt%) | Effective bandwidth (GHz) | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MoS2/GN | Liquid phase stripping, hydrothermal | 2.58 | −57.31 | 40 | 12.28 | This work |
| MoS2 | Hydrothermal | 2.0 | −22.85 | 40 | 4.5 | This work |
| MoS2 | Liquid phase stripping | 2.4 | −38.42 | 60 | 4.16 |
|
| MoS2/RGO | Hummers, chemical vapor deposition | 1.9 | −50.9 | 10 | 5.72 |
|
| MoS2/RGO | Hummers, hydrothermal | 2.5 | −41.53 | 10 | 5.92 |
|
| MoS2/RGO | Hummers, hydrothermal | 2.4 | −41.9 | 30 | 5.8 |
|
| M/MoS2/RGO | Hummers, liquid phase ultrasound | 2.5 | −49.7 | 18 | 5.81 |
|
| MoS2/GN | Liquid phase stripping, hydrothermal | 2.2 | −55.3 | 20 | 5.6 |
|