JOURNAL ARTICLE

Metal–Organic Framework‐Manipulated Dielectric Genes Inside Silicon Carbonitride toward Tunable Electromagnetic Wave Absorption

Abstract

Abstract Heterointerface engineering for different identifiable length scales has emerged as a key research area for obtaining materials capable of high‐performance electromagnetic wave absorption; however, achieving controllable architectural and compositional complexity in nanomaterials with environmental and thermal stabilities remains challenging. Herein, metal‐containing silicon carbonitride (SiCN/M) nanocomposite ceramics with multiphase heterointerfaces were in situ synthesized via coordination crosslinking, catalytic graphitization, and phase separation processes using trace amounts of metal–organic frameworks (MOFs). The results reveal that the regulation of dielectric genes by MOFs can yield considerable lattice strain and abundant lattice defects, contributing to strong interfacial and dipole polarizations. The as‐prepared SiCN/M ceramics demonstrate excellent microwave absorption performance: the minimum reflection loss (RL min ) is −72.6 dB at a thickness of only 1.5 mm and −54.1 dB at an ultralow frequency of 3.56 GHz for the SiCN/Fe ceramics and the RL min is −55.1 dB with a broad bandwidth of 3.4 GHz at an ultralow thickness of 1.2 mm for the SiCN/CoFe ceramic. The results are expected to provide guidance for the design of future dielectric microwave absorption materials based on heterointerface engineering while offering a paradigm for developing MOF‐modified SiCN nanocomposite ceramics with desirable properties.

Keywords:
Materials science Nanocomposite Ceramic Microwave Nanomaterials Dielectric Silicon Absorption (acoustics) Reflection loss Optoelectronics Nanotechnology Composite material Composite number

Metrics

119
Cited By
12.94
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
53
Refs
0.99
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
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.