Tuning
the Shape Anisotropy and Electromagnetic Screening
Ability of Ultrahigh Magnetic Polymer and Surfactant-Capped FeCo Nanorods
and Nanocubes in Soft Conducting Composites
posted on 2016-09-07, 00:00authored byInjamamul Arief, Sourav Biswas, Suryasarathi Bose
Herein,
we demonstrate that very high electromagnetic (EM) shielding
efficiency can be achieved by dispersing nanoengineered FeCo anisometric
nanostructures in a poly(vinylidene difluoride) matrix in the presence
of conductive nanofillers (multiwall carbon nanotubes, MWCNTs). The
FeCo nanorods (∼800 nm) and nanocubes (∼100 nm) were
fabricated by a facile surfactant and polymer-assisted one-pot borohydride
reduction method. The growth mechanism depicted a two-directional
growth for cubes, whereas for nanorods, a unidirectional growth pattern
across the (110) plane was evident. A total shielding effectiveness
(SET) of −44 dB at 18 GHz was achieved for a particular
combination of FeCo nanorods and MWCNT, and for nanocube-based composites,
it was found to be −39 dB at 18 GHz. It was observed from zero
field cooled-field cooled curves that the samples displayed room temperature
ferromagnetism. An excellent correlation between high aspect ratio
FeCo nanorod and superior EM absorption (89%) was explored, pertaining
to the fact that nanorods possessed higher magnetic saturation (177.1
emu/g) and coercivity (550 Oe) in contrast to the nanocubes with similar
composition. Furthermore, theoretical insight into the mechanism revealed
a high degree of interface scattering between conductive MWCNT and
magnetic loss components, giving rise to an excellent synergy between
magnetic and dielectric parts.