Research on electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding materials has become very important as one looks for polymer composites as EMI shielding paints and coatings. EMI Shielding is mainly dependent on absorption and reflection losses, which in turn depend on conductivity, permittivity and permeability of the material. In the present work, we have tried to use the properties of graphene to improve EMI shielding and absorbing properties of the polymer composite. The work is focussed on two aspects of the materials; firstly, to developed an EMI shielding paint which can be used as coating and secondly, development of such paint which has absorption as the dominant mechanism of shielding. Reduced graphene oxide(rGO) has been conjugated with ferromagnetic nanostructures. Absorption of up to ∼12 dB for composite of rGOFe 3 O 4 and ∼18 dB for the composite of rGONi was observed, which is more than 99% of the total radiation and hence, can be useful for commercial applications.
Fine combination of natural botanical extracts to evaluate and maximize their medicinal efficacy has been studied for long. However, their limited shelf-life, complicated extraction protocols, and difficult compositional analysis have always been a problem. It is due to this that such materials take time to convert them into a proper pharmaceutical technology or product. In this context, we report on synthesis of self-assembled template of one of the most popular natural product, aloevera. This forms a fine porous membrane like structure, in which a natural drug, curcumin has been immobilized/trapped. The so-made curcumin-loaded-aloevera (CLA) structures have been carefully evaluated using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), atomic force microscopy (AFM), UV-vis spectroscopy and fluorescence microscopy. While FTIR shows that there is no chemical interaction between aloevera and curcumin, the pores are finely occupied by curcumin molecules. Fine microscopy structures reveal their distribution and fluorescence microscopy confirm the presence of curcumin within the pores. TGA shows 15% loading of the curcumin in the template and UV-visible spectroscopy data shows independent peaks of both, aloevera (196 nm and 256 nm) and curcumin (423 nm), respectively. When subjected to antioxidant studies, using DPPH assays, CLAs show a synergistically superior DPPH radical scavenging activity as compared to only curcumin and only aloevera extract. Same is true for hydroxyl and NO2 radicals. Trans-membrane release study reveals that there is no significant difference in the amount of curcumin release from CLAs till initial 30 min, however, it increases steadily thereafter. CLA is found to facilitate efficient release of curcumin in 5 h, which is higher as compared to the curcumin alone.
Nanocrystalline lanthanum hexaboride (LaB(6)) films have been deposited on molybdenum foil by the pulsed laser deposition (PLD) technique. The as-deposited films were characterized by x-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). The XRD pattern shows the cubic crystallinity of the LaB(6) film. The AFM studies reveal that the conical shaped LaB(6) nanostructures have height 60 nm, base 800 nm, and a typical radius of curvature ∼20 nm. A comparison of force and in situ current imaging AFM studies reveals that current contrast does not originate from the surface topography of the LaB(6) film. Field emission studies have been performed in the planar diode configuration. A current density of 4.4 × 10(-2) A cm(-2) is drawn from the actual emitting area. The Fowler-Nordheim plot is found to be linear, in accordance with the quantum mechanical tunneling phenomenon. The field enhancement factor is estimated to be 3585, indicating that the field emission is from LaB(6) nanocrystallites present on the emitter surface, as confirmed by the AFM. The emission current-time plots show current stability to the extent of 5% fluctuation about the average current over a period of 3 h.
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