Acid modified multiwalled carbon nanotubes (a-MWCNT) reinforced polyurethane (PU) composite films have been fabricated using a solvent casting technique with 0-10 wt% of a-MWCNTs. A nanoindentation study has been carried out on these films in order to investigate the mechanical properties. Incorporation of a-MWCNTs in a PU matrix led to a drastic increase in the hardness and elastic modulus. The maximum nanoindentation hardness of 217.5 MPa for 10 wt% a-MWCNT loading was observed as compared to 58.5 MPa for pure PU (an overall improvement of 271%). The nanoindentation elastic modulus for a 10 wt% a-MWCNT loaded sample was 1504.2 MPa as compared to 385.7 MPa for pure PU (an overall improvement of 290%). In addition to hardness and elastic modulus, other mechanical properties i.e. plastic index parameter, elastic recovery, ratio of residual displacement after load removal and displacement at the maximum load and plastic deformation energy have also been investigated. The enhancement in the mechanical properties was correlated with spectroscopic and microscopic investigations using Raman spectroscopy, SEM and TEM. Dispersion of a-MWCNTs in the PU matrix was studied using Raman mapping. Besides the improvement in mechanical properties, the electromagnetic interference shielding properties were also investigated in the 8.2-12.4 GHz (X-band) frequency range. A value of $29 dB for the 10 wt% MWCNT loaded sample having a thickness of 1.5 mm was obtained.Therefore, these polyurethane composite films shall not only be useful for hard and scratchless coatings but also for protection from electromagnetic radiation in making electromagnetic shielding bags for packaging of electronic circuits and for scratchless tape for laminating circuit boards.
Microwave shielding properties of chemically synthesized MnO 2 decorated graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) are reported for the first time. The nature of MnO 2 decoration on the GNRs has been investigated using scanning electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy and high resolution transmission electron microscopy. The electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding effectiveness of this material was investigated in the microwave region . The presence of MnO 2 on GNR enhances the interfacial polarization, multiple scattering, natural resonances and the effective anisotropy energy, which leads to absorption dominated high shielding effectiveness of À57 dB (blocking >99.9999% radiation) by a 3 mm thick sample. Dielectric attributes (3 0 and 3 00 ) were evaluated to understand the mechanism of the excellent shielding effectiveness. The material will be an excellent choice for radar absorbing applications.
Graphene-based nanocomposites have proven to be very promising materials for gas sensing applications. In this paper, we present a general approach for the preparation of graphene-WO(3) nanocomposites. Graphene-WO(3) nanocomposite thin-layer sensors were prepared by drop coating the dispersed solution onto the alumina substrate. These nanocomposites were used for the detection of NO(2) for the first time. TEM micrographs revealed that WO(3) nanoparticles were well distributed on graphene nanosheets. Three different compositions (0.2, 0.5 and 0.1 wt%) of graphene with WO(3) were used for the gas sensing measurements. It was observed that the sensor response to NO(2) increased nearly three times in the case of graphene-WO(3) nanocomposite layer as compared to a pure WO(3) layer at room temperature. The best response of the graphene-WO(3) nanocomposite was obtained at 250 °C.
We report a significant variation in the static contact angle measured on indium oxide (IO) nanoparticle coated Si substrates that have different nanoparticle sizes. These IO nanoparticles, which have well defined shape and sizes, were synthesized by chemical vapor deposition in a horizontal alumina tube furnace. The size of the IO nanoparticles was varied by changing the source material, substrate temperature, and the deposition time. A sessile droplet method was used to determine the macroscopic contact angle on these IO nanoparticle covered Si substrate using two different liquids: de-ionized water and diethylene glycol (DEG). It was observed that contact angle depends strongly on the nanoparticle size. The contact angle was found to vary from 24° to 67° for de-ionized water droplet and from 15° to 60° for DEG droplet, for the nanoparticle sizes varying from 14 to 620 nm. The contact angle decreases with a decrease in the particles size. We have performed a theoretical analysis to determine the dependence of contact angle on the nanoparticle size. This formulation qualitatively shows a similar trend of decrease in the contact angle with a decrease in nanoparticle size. Providing a rough estimate of nanoparticle size by sessile droplet contact angle measurement is the novelty in this work.
Compositional tailoring enables fine-tuning of thermoelectric (TE) transport parameters by synergistic modulation of electronic and vibrational properties. In the present work, the aspects of compositionally tailored defects have been explored in ZrNiSn-based half-Heusler (HH) TE materials to achieve high TE performance and cost effectiveness in n-type Hffree HH alloys. In off-stoichiometric Ni-rich ZrNi 1+x Sn alloys in a low Ni doping limit (x < 0.1), excess Ni induces defects (Ni/vacancy antisite + interstitials), which tend to cause band structure modification. In addition, the structural similarity of HH and full-Heusler (FH) compounds and formation energetics lead to an intrinsic phase segregation of FH nanoscale precipitates that are coherently dispersed within the ZrNiSn HH matrix as nanoclusters. A consonance was achieved experimentally between these two competing mechanisms for optimal HH composition having both FH precipitates and Ni/vacancy antisite defects in the HH matrix by elevating the sintering temperature up to the solubility limit range of the ZrNiSn system. Defect-mediated optimization of electrical and thermal transport via carrier concentration tuning, energy filtering, and possibly all scale-hierarchical architecture resulted in a maximum ZT ≈ 1.1 at 873 K for the optimized ZrNi 1.03 Sn composition. Our findings highlight the realistic prospect of enhancing TE performance via compositional engineering approach for wide applications of TE.
SnSe/SnSe2 has diverse applications like solar cells, photodetectors, memory devices, Li and Na-ion batteries, gas sensors, photocatalysis, supercapacitors, topological insulators, resistive switching devices due to its optimal band gap.
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