Abstract

Developing excellent electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding materials with robust EMI shielding efficiency (SE), high mechanical performance, and multifunctionality is imperative. Carbon materials are well recognized as promising alternatives for high-performance EMI shielding, but their high brittleness greatly hampers their applications. In this work, a cellulose nanofiber/reduced graphene oxide-glucose carbon aerogel (C-CNFs/rGO-glu) with high compression, elasticity, and excellent EMI shielding performance was fabricated by directional freeze-drying followed by carbonization. Specifically, the height and stress retention are 88% and 90.9%, respectively, after 100 cycles of compression release at a high strain of 70%. The electromagnetic shielding effectiveness of the aerogels reached 67.5 dB and presented an absorption-dominant shielding mechanism with a 97.5% absorption loss ratio. Further, the carbon aerogel could capture subtle electrical signals to monitor different human behaviors and showed excellent heat insulation and infrared stealth performance.

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