JOURNAL ARTICLE

2D/2D Mo0.74W0.26S2/Ti3C2 MXene for microwave absorption with broad effective absorption band

Xiangru KongLi ZhangHui LiXuebin Zhu

Year: 2023 Journal:   Applied Physics Letters Vol: 123 (2)   Publisher: American Institute of Physics

Abstract

Transition metal dichalcogenide MoS2 is considered as a type of dielectric loss dominated electromagnetic wave absorbing material owing to the high specific surface area, layered structure, and lightweight. Introduction of interfaces will improve the electromagnetic wave absorbing performance. Here, the phase engineering of MoS2 is realized through W doping since of the microstrain effect, resulting in the appearance of 2H/1T MoS2 phase interface. Furthermore, MoS2/Ti3C2 MXene interface is realized through the construction of MoS2/Ti3C2 MXene heterostructure, leading to obvious improvements in electromagnetic wave absorbing. Because of the simultaneous introduction of 2H/1T MoS2 phase interface and the MoS2/Ti3C2 MXene interface, the microwave reflection loss can reach −45.2 dB with broad effective absorption bandwidth (<−10 dB) of 7.1 GHz (7.8–14.9 GHz) at the same thickness of 3 mm. The results shed light on enhancing electromagnetic wave absorbing performance by phase engineering as well as construction of two dimensional material/two dimensional material heterostructures, thereby introducing multiple interfaces.

Keywords:
Materials science Microwave Heterojunction Reflection loss Optoelectronics Electromagnetic radiation Absorption (acoustics) Dielectric Doping Phase (matter) Optics Composite number Composite material Chemistry Telecommunications

Metrics

13
Cited By
1.41
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
25
Refs
0.74
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Electromagnetic wave absorption materials
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Advanced Antenna and Metasurface Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Aerospace Engineering
Metamaterials and Metasurfaces Applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
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