Abstract
One-dimensional carbon-based materials have emerged as promising electromagnetic wave absorption agents due to their outstanding conductivity, high stability, low weight, and easy availability. Properly optimizing their electromagnetic parameters is expected to further enhance the electromagnetic wave attenuation capacity. In this work, efficient Cu9S5/C nanocomposite fibers are prepared by a combined approach of electrospinning and subsequent carbonization-sulfurization processes. The Cu9S5 nanoparticles with size of ca. 100–200 nm were homogeneously embedded in fibrous carbon matrix with diameter of 300 nm. For electromagnetic wave absorption, the optimized composited nanofibers (Cu9S5/C-3) exhibited an extremely superb reflection loss of −65.4 dB (9.5 GHz, 2.7 mm) at a lower mass fraction (20 wt%). And the effective absorption bandwidth could be up to 4.1 GHz (8.0–12.1 GHz) with a matching thickness of 2.9 mm, covering the whole X-band. Electromagnetic wave attenuation mechanism investigation revealed that the performance enhancement originated from the synergy of various loss pathways, including interfacial polarization, dipole polarization, and conductive loss. The unique hierarchical structure from particle embedding, one-dimensional fiber, to three-dimensional network further amplified the performance advantages of each component. This work is anticipated to provide a feasible strategy to synthesize sulfide/carbon binary composite fibers for efficient electromagnetic wave absorption.
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