TY - JOUR
T1 - Cobalt ferrite sphere-coated buckhorn-like barium titanate
T2 - Fabrication, characterization, its dielectric resonance, and microwave attenuation properties
AU - Ji, Renlong
AU - Cao, Chuanbao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 AIP Publishing LLC.
PY - 2014/10/14
Y1 - 2014/10/14
N2 - Barium titanate (BTO) with different morphology is prepared through hydrothermal method using titania spheres as precursor, then calcined at different temperatures and ultimately coated with cobalt ferrite (BTO/CFO). The dielectric dispersion of the composite containing BTO (75 wt. % ratio in paraffin wax) shows evidence of resonance behaviour in the microwave spectrum, rather than the usually observed relaxation mode. The imaginary part of permittivity (ε″) displays a strong peak in the 10-13 GHz frequency region, especially for buckhorn-like BTO (hydrothermally synthesized at 110 °C and calcined at 1100 °C). The dielectric response anomaly of BTO in special morphology is due to the emission of plane acoustic waves caused by electrostrictive and converse piezoelectric effects. An accepted model is adopted to simulate the resonance frequency. The minimum reflection loss of cauliflower-like BTO (hydrothermally synthesized at 110 °C, then calcined at 600 °C for 2 h, 75 wt. % ratio) in paraffin wax reaches -30.831 dB at 10.56 GHz with a matching thickness of 2 mm, lower than all the reported values. When the sintering temperature is changed to 1100 °C (buckhorn-like BTO), the minimum reflection loss value is -24.37 dB at 12.56 GHz under the thickness of 3 mm. After combination with CFO, the value reaches -42.677 dB when the thickness is 5.6 mm. The ginger-like BTO (hydrothermally synthesized at 200 °C and calcined at different temperatures) is inferior in microwave reflection reduction. The electromagnetic interference shielding effectiveness of buckhorn-like BTO composite is calculated to be -12.7 dB (94.6% shielding) at resonance frequency (2 mm, 11.52 GHz). This work clearly shows the potential to tune the dielectric property of ferroelectrics through control of morphology, facilitating new comprehension of the ferroelectrics in microwave regime.
AB - Barium titanate (BTO) with different morphology is prepared through hydrothermal method using titania spheres as precursor, then calcined at different temperatures and ultimately coated with cobalt ferrite (BTO/CFO). The dielectric dispersion of the composite containing BTO (75 wt. % ratio in paraffin wax) shows evidence of resonance behaviour in the microwave spectrum, rather than the usually observed relaxation mode. The imaginary part of permittivity (ε″) displays a strong peak in the 10-13 GHz frequency region, especially for buckhorn-like BTO (hydrothermally synthesized at 110 °C and calcined at 1100 °C). The dielectric response anomaly of BTO in special morphology is due to the emission of plane acoustic waves caused by electrostrictive and converse piezoelectric effects. An accepted model is adopted to simulate the resonance frequency. The minimum reflection loss of cauliflower-like BTO (hydrothermally synthesized at 110 °C, then calcined at 600 °C for 2 h, 75 wt. % ratio) in paraffin wax reaches -30.831 dB at 10.56 GHz with a matching thickness of 2 mm, lower than all the reported values. When the sintering temperature is changed to 1100 °C (buckhorn-like BTO), the minimum reflection loss value is -24.37 dB at 12.56 GHz under the thickness of 3 mm. After combination with CFO, the value reaches -42.677 dB when the thickness is 5.6 mm. The ginger-like BTO (hydrothermally synthesized at 200 °C and calcined at different temperatures) is inferior in microwave reflection reduction. The electromagnetic interference shielding effectiveness of buckhorn-like BTO composite is calculated to be -12.7 dB (94.6% shielding) at resonance frequency (2 mm, 11.52 GHz). This work clearly shows the potential to tune the dielectric property of ferroelectrics through control of morphology, facilitating new comprehension of the ferroelectrics in microwave regime.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84907984526&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1063/1.4897368
DO - 10.1063/1.4897368
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84907984526
SN - 0021-8979
VL - 116
JO - Journal of Applied Physics
JF - Journal of Applied Physics
IS - 14
M1 - 144106
ER -