Publication | Closed Access
Glass‐Blowing‐Inspired Upcycling of Thermosetting Polymer to Neuron‐Like Hierarchical Carbon for Microwave Absorption and Conversion
18
Citations
47
References
2024
Year
EngineeringEnergy-saving MaterialEnergy ConversionPolymer WasteMicrowave AbsorptionNeuron‐like Hierarchical CarbonPolymersChemical EngineeringMaterials FabricationPolymer ProcessingBiomedical DevicesCarbon AerogelsHybrid MaterialsElectromagnetic RadiationPolymer ChemistryMaterials ScienceEnergy HarvestingPlastic UpcyclingEnvironmental PollutionEnergy StorageEnergy MaterialElectronic MaterialsGlassy CarbonPolymer ScienceGlass‐blowing‐inspired UpcyclingSelf-powered NanodevicesFunctional Materials
Upgrading thermosetting polymer waste and harvesting unwanted electromagnetic energy are of great significance in solving environmental pollution and energy shortage problems. Herein, inspired by the glass-blowing art, a spontaneous, controllable, and scalable strategy is proposed to prepare hollow carbon materials by inner blowing and outside blocking. Specifically, hierarchically neuron-like hollow carbon materials (HCMSs) with various sizes are fabricated from melamine-formaldehyde sponge (MS) waste. Benefiting from the synergistic of the hollow "cell body" and the connected "protrusions" networks, HCMSs reveal superior electromagnetic absorption performance with a strong reflection loss of -54.9 dB, electromagnetic-heat conversion ability with a high conversion efficiency of 34.4%, and efficient energy storage performance in supercapacitor. Furthermore, a multifunctional device integrating electromagnetic-heat-electrical energy conversion is designed, and its feasibility is proved by experiments and theoretical calculations. The integrated device reveals an output voltage of 34.5 mV and a maximum output power of 0.89 µW with electromagnetic radiation for 60 s. This work provides a novel solution to recycle polymer waste, electromagnetic energy, and unwanted thermal energy.
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