Publication | Closed Access
Synthesis of Polymer-Derived Ceramic Si(B)CN-Carbon Nanotube Composite by Microwave-Induced Interfacial Polarization
49
Citations
28
References
2011
Year
Materials ScienceHeat GenerationEngineeringCarbon-based MaterialNanomaterialsCn-carbon Nanotube CompositeApplied PhysicsPolymer-derived Ceramic SiRadiofrequency HeatingMicrowave CeramicMicrowave-induced Interfacial PolarizationMicrowave IrradiationNanocompositeMicrowave EngineeringCarbon NanotubesMicrowave Synthesis
We demonstrate synthesis of a polymer-derived ceramic (PDC)-multiwall carbon nanotube (MWCNT) composite using microwave irradiation at 2.45 GHz. The process takes about 10 min of microwave irradiation for the polymer-to-ceramic conversion. The successful conversion of polymer coated carbon nanotubes to ceramic composite is chemically ascertained by Fourier transform-infrared and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and physically by thermogravimetric analysis and transmission electron microscopy characterization. Frequency dependent dielectric measurements in the S-Band (300 MHz to 3 GHz) were studied to quantify the extent of microwave-CNT interaction and the degree of selective heating available at the MWCNT-polymer interface. Experimentally obtained return loss of the incident microwaves in the specimen explains the reason for heat generation. The temperature-dependent permittivity of polar molecules further strengthens the argument of internal heat generation.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1