Preparation and Application of Cube-like ZnSnO3 Composite Coated with Highly Graphitized Fine Ash
20220119644 · 2022-04-21
Assignee
- Institute of Energy, Hefei Comprehensive National Science Center (Hefei, CN)
- AnHui University of Science and Technology (Huainan, CN)
Inventors
- Shengtao GAO (Huainan, CN)
- Yuanchun ZHANG (Huainan, CN)
- Chengli WU (Huainan, CN)
- Hanxu LI (Huainan, CN)
Cpc classification
C01P2004/80
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01P2002/72
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
H05K9/0081
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A preparation method of a cube-like ZnSnO.sub.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash comprises steps: S1: with the gasified fine slag of pulverized coal as a raw material, preparing the fine ash by adopting a three-step acidification method; and S2: adding the fine ash prepared in the Si into a container filled with distilled water, ultrasonically dispersing for 20-40 min, adding equal molar masses of SnCl.sub.4.5H.sub.2O and (Zn(NO.sub.3).6H.sub.2O respectively, uniformly stirring, dropwise adding ammonia into the mixed solution and magnetically stirring until the pH value of the mixed solution is 12, heating the mixed solution, washing the product obtained with deionized water and ethanol for 2-4 times, and finally drying to obtain a ZnSnO.sub.3@fine composite. With the dielectric property and conductivity adjusted, the composite prepared reveals a good impedance matching performance and an improved MA performance.
Claims
1. A method for preparing a cube-like ZnSnO.sub.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash, characterized by comprising the following method steps: S1: preparing fine ash with the gasified fine slag of pulverized coal as a raw material, preparing the fine ash by adopting a three-step acidification method; S2: synthesizing a ZnSnO.sub.3@fine ash composite adding the fine ash prepared in the S1 into a container filled with distilled water, ultrasonically dispersing for 20-40 min, adding equal molar masses of SnCl.sub.4.5H.sub.2O and (Zn(NO.sub.3).6H.sub.2O respectively, uniformly stirring, dropwise adding ammonia into the mixed solution and magnetically stirring until the pH value of the mixed solution is 12, heating the mixed solution, washing the product obtained with deionized water and ethanol for 2-4 times, and finally drying to obtain a ZnSnO.sub.3@fine composite.
2. The method for preparing a cube-like ZnSnO.sub.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash according to claim 1, characterized in that the fine ash is prepared in the following method steps: S11: with the gasified fine slag of pulverized coal as a raw material, mixing with hydrochloric acid solution in a container, stirring and filtering; S12: washing the solid filtered in the S11 to neutral with water, and drying; S13: mixing the solid dried in the S12 with hydrofluoric acid solution in a container, stirring, filtering, washing to neutral with water, and drying; and S14: mixing the solid dried in the S13 with hydrochloric acid solution in a container, stirring, filtering, washing to neutral with water, and drying to obtain fine ash.
3. The method for preparing a cube-like ZnSnO.sub.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash according to claim 2, characterized in that the concentration of the hydrochloric acid solution is 5 mol/L, and the mass-to-volume ratio of the gasified fine slag to the hydrochloric acid solution is 1 g:(8-12) mL in the S11.
4. The method for preparing a cube-like ZnSnO.sub.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash according to claim 2, characterized in that the mass fraction of the hydrofluoric acid solution is 40%, and the mass-to-volume ratio of the gasified fine slag to the hydrofluoric acid solution is 1 g:(8-12) mL in the S13.
5. The method for preparing a cube-like ZnSnO.sub.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash according to claim 2, characterized in that the mixing temperature is all 50-70° C. in the S11, the S13 and the S14.
6. The method for preparing a cube-like ZnSnO.sub.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash according to claim 2, characterized in that the drying condition is drying at 100-110° C. for 10-14 h in the S12, the S13 and the S14.
7. The method for preparing a cube-like ZnSnO.sub.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash according to claim 1, characterized in that the mass molar ratio of the fine ash, SnCl.sub.4.5H.sub.2O and (Zn(NO.sub.3).sub.2.6H.sub.2O is 1 mg:0.0125-0.0375 mol:0.0125-0.0375 mol in the S2.
8. The method for preparing a cube-like ZnSnO.sub.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash according to claim 1, characterized in that the reaction condition is reacting at 140-160° C. for 8-12 h in the S2.
9. The method for preparing a cube-like ZnSnO.sub.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash according to claim 1, characterized in that the drying condition is vacuum drying at 50-70° C. for 10-14 h in the S2.
10. An application of a cube-like ZnSnO.sub.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash prepared according to claim 1 in microwave absorption.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0025]
[0026] In
[0027] In
[0028] In
[0029]
[0030] In
[0031] In
[0032] In
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0033] The present invention will be further described in combination with specific embodiments.
[0034] SnCl.sub.4.5H.sub.2O, Zn(NO.sub.3).sub.2.6H.sub.2O and NH.sub.3.H.sub.2O used herein are all analytically pure and purchased from Sinopharm Holdings Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd.
Example 1
[0035] The present invention provides a method for preparing a cube-like ZnSnO.sup.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash, comprising the following method steps:
[0036] S1: preparing fine ash
[0037] with the gasified fine slag of pulverized coal as a raw material, preparing the fine ash by adopting a three-step acidification method; with the specific steps as follows:
[0038] S11: with 50 g of the gasified fine slag of pulverized coal as a raw material, mixing with 500 ml of hydrochloric acid solution (5 mol/L) in a container, stirring and filtering;
[0039] S12: washing the solid filtered in the S11 to neutral with water, and drying;
[0040] S13: mixing the solid dried in the S12 with 500 ml of hydrofluoric acid solution (40%, wt %) in a container, stirring, filtering, washing to neutral with water, and drying; and
[0041] S14: mixing the solid dried in the S13 with 500 ml of hydrochloric acid solution (1.19 g/mL) in a container, stirring, filtering, washing to neutral with water, and drying to obtain fine ash.
[0042] The mixing temperature is all 60° C. in the S11, the S13 and the S14.
[0043] The drying condition is drying at 105° C. for 12 h in the S12, the S13 and the S14.
[0044] S2: synthesizing a ZnSnO.sub.3@fine ash composite
[0045] adding 40 mg of the fine ash prepared in the S1 into a container filled with 30 ml of distilled water, ultrasonically dispersing for 30 min, adding 0.5 mol of SnCl.sub.4.5H.sub.2O and 0.5 mol of (Zn(NO.sub.3).6H.sub.2O respectively, uniformly stirring for about 30 min, dropwise adding ammonia (25%) into the mixed solution and magnetically stirring until the pH value of the mixed solution is 12, heating the mixed solution, washing the product obtained with deionized water and ethanol for 3 times, and finally drying to obtain a ZnSnO.sub.3@fine ZSFA-1.
[0046] The reaction condition is reacting at 140° C. for 8 h in the S2.
[0047] The drying condition is vacuum drying at 50° C. for 10 h in the S2.
Example 2
[0048] The present invention provides a method for preparing a cube-like ZnSnO.sup.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash, comprising the following method steps:
[0049] S1: preparing fine ash
[0050] with the gasified fine slag of pulverized coal as a raw material, preparing the fine ash by adopting a three-step acidification method; with the specific steps as follows:
[0051] S11: with 50 g of the gasified fine slag of pulverized coal as a raw material, mixing with 500 ml of hydrochloric acid solution (5 mol/L) in a container, stirring and filtering;
[0052] S12: washing the solid filtered in the S11 to neutral with water, and drying;
[0053] S13: mixing the solid dried in the S12 with 500 ml of hydrofluoric acid solution (40%, wt %) in a container, stirring, filtering, washing to neutral with water, and drying; and
[0054] S14: mixing the solid dried in the S13 with 500 ml of hydrochloric acid solution (1.19 g/mL) in a container, stirring, filtering, washing to neutral with water, and drying to obtain fine ash.
[0055] The mixing temperature is all 60° C. in the S11, the S13 and the S14.
[0056] The drying condition is drying at 105° C. for 12 h in the S12, the S13 and the S14.
[0057] S2: synthesizing a ZnSnO.sub.3@fine ash composite
[0058] adding 40 mg of the fine ash prepared in the S1 into a container filled with 30 ml of distilled water, ultrasonically dispersing for 30 min, adding 1.0 mol of SnCl.sub.4.5H.sub.2O and 1.0 mol of (Zn(NO.sub.3).6H.sub.2O respectively, uniformly stirring for about 30 min, dropwise adding ammonia (25%) into the mixed solution and magnetically stirring until the pH value of the mixed solution is 12, heating the mixed solution, washing the product obtained with deionized water and ethanol for 3 times, and finally drying to obtain a ZnSnO.sub.3@fine ZSFA-2.
[0059] The reaction condition is reacting at 150° C. for 10 h in the S2.
[0060] The drying condition is vacuum drying at 60° C. for 12 h in the S2.
Example 3
[0061] The present invention provides a method for preparing a cube-like ZnSnO.sup.3 composite coated with highly graphitized fine ash, comprising the following method steps:
[0062] S1: preparing fine ash
[0063] with the gasified fine slag of pulverized coal as a raw material, preparing the fine ash by adopting a three-step acidification method; with the specific steps as follows:
[0064] S11: with 50 g of the gasified fine slag of pulverized coal as a raw material, mixing with 500 ml of hydrochloric acid solution (5 mol/L) in a container, stirring and filtering;
[0065] S12: washing the solid filtered in the S11 to neutral with water, and drying;
[0066] S13: mixing the solid dried in the S12 with 500 ml of hydrofluoric acid solution (40%, wt %) in a container, stirring, filtering, washing to neutral with water, and drying; and
[0067] S14: mixing the solid dried in the S13 with 500 ml of hydrochloric acid solution (1.19 g/mL) in a container, stirring, filtering, washing to neutral with water, and drying to obtain fine ash.
[0068] The mixing temperature is all 60° C. in the S11, the S13 and the S14.
[0069] The drying condition is drying at 105° C. for 12 h in the S12, the S13 and the S14.
[0070] S2: synthesizing a ZnSnO.sub.3@fine ash composite
[0071] adding 40 mg of the fine ash prepared in the S1 into a container filled with 30 ml of distilled water, ultrasonically dispersing for 30 min, adding 1.5 mol of SnCl.sub.4.5H.sub.2O and 1.5 mol of (Zn(NO.sub.3).6H.sub.2O respectively, uniformly stirring for about 30 min, dropwise adding ammonia (25%) into the mixed solution and magnetically stirring until the pH value of the mixed solution is 12, heating the mixed solution, washing the product obtained with deionized water and ethanol for 3 times, and finally drying to obtain a ZnSnO.sub.3@fine ZSFA-3.
[0072] The reaction condition is reacting at 160° C. for 12 h in the S2.
[0073] The drying condition is vacuum drying at 70° C. for 14 h in the S2.
[0074] The chemical composition, structure and morphology of the ZSFA composite prepared by the present invention are characterized by an x-ray diffractometer (LabX XRD-6000, Shimadzu, Japan), a laser confocal Raman spectrometer (Renishaw-2000, Renishaw, UK), an x-ray photoelectron spectrometer (ESCALABMK-II, Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc, USA), a field emission scanning electron microscope (FEI Sirion 2000, FEI Co., Netherlands), and a transmission electron microscope (JEOL-2010, Japan Electronics Co. Ltd., Japan). The relevant electromagnetic parameters are tested by a vector network analyzer (AV 3629D, CETC 41.sup.st Institute, China) from 2 to 18 GHz. The particulate composite is mixed with paraffin wax at a mass ratio of 1:1 and pressed into coaxial ring (outer diameter: 7.00 mm, inner diameter: 3.04 mm) to study its absorption performance.
[0075] Compared with other carbon materials, the fine ash prepared by the present invention can be used without further modification. In the synthesis process of the ZSFA composite, firstly, the defect sites and negatively charged functional groups of the fine ash can attract Zn.sup.2+ and Sn.sup.4+ ions through strong electrostatic interaction; secondly, with the additive ammonia as precipitant, stannic hydroxide and zinc hydroxide are generated and attached to the surface of the fine ash; and finally, self-assembled ZnSnO.sub.3 is coated by fine ash particles to form the final ZnSnO.sub.3@. The specific synthesis process is shown in
[0076] The chemical composition, crystal structure and degree of graphitization of the ZSFA composite are characterized by XRD and Raman, with the results shown in
[0077] The morphology and microstructure of the composites ZSFA-1, ZSFA-2 and ZSFA-3 are analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), respectively; as shown in
[0078] To investigate the chemical environment and valence state of elements, the prepared ZSFA-2 is characterized by XPS. The results show that the composites possess the elements Zn, Sn, O and C corresponding to ZnSnO.sub.3 and fine ash, respectively. In
[0079] As a functional material, excellent MA composites should have strong energy conversion ability, wide absorption frequency and thin application thickness. For the synthesized ZSFA, the reflection loss (RL≤−10 db) and the effective absorption bandwidth (EABD, RL≤−10 db) are the main criteria for evaluating MA performance (
Z.sub.0 is free space impedance, Z.sub.1n is input impedance, ε.sub.r is a complex dielectric constant, μ.sub.r is a complex permeability, f is the recent GHz frequency test, d is the test thickness, c is the microwave speed in free space, and Z.sub.in is input impedance.
[0080] For ZSFA-1, with the increase of thickness, the maximum absorption RL peak shifts from high frequency region to low frequency region, and the RL values in the thickness range of 1-5 mm are −2.9, −17.0, −27.2, −21.8, −18.6, −24.0, −31.2, −35.6 and −25.7, respectively (
[0081] According to the microwave absorption theory, the microwave absorption capacity is closely related to the intrinsic electromagnetic properties reflected by the electromagnetic parameters. The complex dielectric constant (ε.sub.r=ε′−jε″) and complex permeability (μ.sub.r=μ′−jμ″) exhibit frequency-dependent characteristics at 2-18 GHz, as shown in
[0082] The composites ZSFA-1 and ZSFA-2 exhibit excellent wave absorption performance, strong RL capability and wide absorption characteristics, which meet the requirements of modern MA materials. According to Debye's theory, the real part of the complex dielectric constant represents the storage capacity of the ZSFA absorbing material for the incident electromagnetic wave energy, which determines the upper storage limit of the material. It can be known from Equations (4) and (5) that the imaginary part reflects the dissipation capacity of ZSFA composites and is proportional to the intrinsic conductivity.
Where, ε.sub.S is a static dielectric constant, ε.sub.∞ is a dielectric constant at the limiting frequency, σ is intrinsic conductivity of absorbing material, ω is angular frequency, and τ is polarization relaxation time (ωτ=2πf). To be sure, the enhancement of polarization moments and electron mobility in the synthesized ZSFA composites leads to an increase in the dielectric loss capability.
[0083] The conductivity loss plays an equally important role in enhancing electron migration, and is beneficial to the MA process. The ballistic transport of charge electrons in the fine ash enhances its electrical conductivity under the action of a high frequency electric field. In addition, there are some defective and oxygen-containing functional groups in the fine ash carbon, resulting in abundant dipoles. The geometric center of the charge deviates from the original equilibrium point, leading to dipole polarization (
[0084] ZSFA-2 is a high-performance functional material with the best MA capacity, strong RL value (−47.7 dB, 2.5 mm) and tuning absorption frequencies from c-band and x-band to Ku-band. The EABD coverage of ZSFA-2 is 7.1 GHz, ranging from 10.9 to 18.0 GHz at 2.0 mm thickness, which reflects the broadband response capability. The analysis reveals that ZSFA-2 has the highest tan δe value (0.35), indicating a strong loss potential and energy conversion capability (
[0085] In general, the intrinsic conductivity of the synthesized ZSFA composite determines the result of impedance matching of the incident electromagnetic wave with the MA material. It can be known from Equation (1) that an impedance matching ratio Z (Z=Z.sub.in/Z.sub.0) close to 1 indicates a good matching property, i.e., the incident microwaves can enter the MA system as a whole without reflecting into the contact surface space. The superconductivity of material will cause a skin effect, which is not conducive to electromagnetic wave entering the material. In other words, electromagnetic wave interference shielding materials are prepared from functional materials with ultra-high conductivity instead of MA materials. It is worth noting that the maximum absorption peaks of ZSFA-2 with different thicknesses provide good impedance matching values. The results show that ZSFA-2 has the best electromagnetic parameters and suitable conductivity to obtain good impedance matching and greater loss contribution. Moreover, the maximum RL peaks of ZSFA-2 are shifted from Ku-band to s-band as the thickness increases. This frequency dependence can be explained by the classical quarter-wavelength theory, where the relation between the thickness (tm) and the maximum absorption frequency (m) can be expressed by the following equation:
[0086] In case that the thickness (tm) and the maximum absorption frequency satisfy the above equation, the incident wave and reflected wave propagate in the absorber space in opposite phases of 180°. Compared with some newly released microwave absorbers with pure dielectric loss mechanism, it can be concluded that ZSFA-2 has a strong reflection loss capability and a wide effective frequency (Table 1). This high-performance microwave absorption capability mainly comes from good impedance matching, optimized electromagnetic parameters and multiple dielectric loss mechanisms, resulting in the final excellent microwave energy absorption.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Performance comparison between microwave absorber and absorbing materials EABD RL.sub.min Thickness (GHz) Absorber (dB) (mm) RL ≤- 10 dB Ref Fe.sub.3O.sub.4 @ SnO.sub.2/RGO −45.5 4.0 3.0 Literature ZnOnws/RGO foam/PDMS −27.8 4.8 4.2 Literature ZnO/NPC/RGO −50.5 2.4 7.4 Literature RGO/Fe.sub.3O.sub.4/ZnO −57.0 2.0 5.0 Literature ZnO-Ni-C/RGO −59.3 2.05 5.6 Literature ZnO @ MWCNTs/SiO.sub.2 −20.7 2.5 3.4 Literature ZnSnO.sub.3 @ RGO −53.7 1.8 5.2 Literature ZnSnO.sub.3/MWCNTs −52.1 1.6 3.9 Literature ZSFA-2 −47.7 2.0 7.1 The work
[0087] To sum up, according to the present invention, a ZnSnO3@ fine ash (ZSFA) absorbing material with a special core-shell structure is successfully prepared by coating the self-assembled ZnSnO3 with highly graphitized fine ash based on the hydrothermal reaction method. The material is a pure dielectric ZSFA composite with an Ostwald ripening process. With the dielectric property and conductivity adjusted, the prepared composite reveals a good impedance matching performance and an improved MA performance. With 50% (wt %) added, the synthesized ZSFA-2 show the strongest dielectric loss capability with a maximum RL value of −47.8 dB at 2.5 mm. The widest effective absorption bandwidth can reach 7.0 GHz, or range from 11.0 GHz to 18.0 GHz when the thickness is only 2.0 mm. The relevant electromagnetic properties and dielectric loss capability are also discussed in detail. Due to strong dielectric polarization and multidielectric polarization, suitable conductivity and special electron migration route of the ZSFA composite, it has a tunable dielectric loss behavior and a broadband MA capability. Therefore, the unique pure dielectric ZSFA composite can be used as a potential functional material in the MA field.
[0088] The foregoing is only the preferred embodiments of the present invention and is not for use in limiting the present invention. Therefore, any equivalent substitutions or changes made within the technical scope disclosed herein by a person skilled in the art according to the technical solution and inventive concept of the present invention shall be included in the scope of protection of the present invention.