Crucial role of structural design on performance of cryogel-based EMI shields: an experimental review.

Nanoscale Horiz

Nanomaterials and Polymer Nanocomposites Laboratory, School of Engineering, University of British Columbia, Kelowna, BC, V1V 1V7, Canada.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers are focused on developing highly porous materials like cryogels for electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding that primarily absorb, not reflect, electromagnetic waves.
  • They created various graphene oxide (GO)-based cryogels using different fabrication methods and treated them to improve electrical conductivity.
  • The study found distinct behaviors in shielding effectiveness: chemically-crosslinked cryogels mostly reflected EM waves while worm-like cryogels absorbed them better due to their unique porous structures, providing insights on how to design improved EMI shields.

Article Abstract

In the field of electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding with materials based on highly porous constructs, such as foams, cryogels, aerogels and xerogels, a significant challenge lies in designing structures that primarily absorb rather than reflect incident electromagnetic waves (EMWs). This goal necessitates a dual focus on the electrical conductivity and the internal porosity of the given porous material. To explore these issues, we fabricated various graphene oxide (GO)-based cryogels by molding, emulsion templating, chemically-induced gelation, freeze-casting, and liquid-in-liquid streaming. Following thermal annealing to enhance electrical conductivity for effective EMI shielding, we assessed the physicochemical, mechanical and structural characteristics of these cryogels. Notably, the cryogels exhibited distinct EMI shielding behaviors, varying significantly in terms of primary shielding mechanisms and overall shielding effectiveness (SE). For example, chemically-crosslinked cryogels, which showed the highest electrical conductivity, predominantly reflected EMWs, achieving a reflectance of approximately 70% and a SE of 43.2 dB. In contrast, worm-like cryogels, despite having a similar SE of 42.9 dB, displayed a unique absorption-dominant shielding mechanism. This was attributed to their multi-scale porosities and numerous internal interfaces, which significantly enhanced their ability to absorb EMWs, reflected in an absorbance of 54.7%. Through these experiments, our aim is to provide key heuristic rules for the structural design of EMI shields.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4nh00210eDOI Listing

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