TY - JOUR
T1 - Yolk–Shell Engineering on Single-Component Fe3O4to Realize Magnetic–Dielectric Synergy for Enhanced Microwave Absorption
T2 - Experimental and Simulation Insights
AU - Chen, Na
AU - Han, Bing Bing
AU - Li, Jinfeng
AU - Hu, Jinhu
AU - Guan, Zhen Jie
AU - Jiang, Jian Tang
AU - Wang, Kang Jun
AU - Pan, Ye Tang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 American Chemical Society
PY - 2026/3/25
Y1 - 2026/3/25
N2 - Yolk–shell structural engineering has demonstrated significant advantages in achieving high-performance microwave absorption for multicomponent systems; however, the electromagnetic response mechanism of single-component yolk–shell structure absorbers remain underexplored. This study develops a multistep strategy to fabricate yolk–shell-structured Fe3O4 (YS-Fe3O4), which exhibits a substantially broadened effective absorption bandwidth of 6.87 GHz and a RCS reduction value of 40.76 dB m2, significantly outperforming its solid spherical counterparts (5.39 GHz, 21.1 dB·m2). Experimental results and theoretical simulations reveal that the enhanced microwave absorption originates from the synergistic optimization of dielectric and magnetic loss, which simultaneously improves impedance matching and attenuation capability. Specifically, abundant Fe3O4/air interfaces and increased oxygen vacancy reinforce the dominance of polarization loss and introduce a supplementary conductive loss at low frequency, thereby strengthening multichannel synergy in dielectric dissipation. Concurrently, the enhanced ferromagnetic resonance contributes to a prominent increase in magnetic loss. In agreement with experiments, molecular dynamics simulations validate the enhancement of polarization-driven dielectric loss, while finite element simulation demonstrates the improved magnetic domain motion and magnetization mechanism. This study provides profound theoretical and computational insights into the electromagnetic response mechanism of yolk–shell structures, offering a valuable guidance for designing high-performance microwave absorbers.
AB - Yolk–shell structural engineering has demonstrated significant advantages in achieving high-performance microwave absorption for multicomponent systems; however, the electromagnetic response mechanism of single-component yolk–shell structure absorbers remain underexplored. This study develops a multistep strategy to fabricate yolk–shell-structured Fe3O4 (YS-Fe3O4), which exhibits a substantially broadened effective absorption bandwidth of 6.87 GHz and a RCS reduction value of 40.76 dB m2, significantly outperforming its solid spherical counterparts (5.39 GHz, 21.1 dB·m2). Experimental results and theoretical simulations reveal that the enhanced microwave absorption originates from the synergistic optimization of dielectric and magnetic loss, which simultaneously improves impedance matching and attenuation capability. Specifically, abundant Fe3O4/air interfaces and increased oxygen vacancy reinforce the dominance of polarization loss and introduce a supplementary conductive loss at low frequency, thereby strengthening multichannel synergy in dielectric dissipation. Concurrently, the enhanced ferromagnetic resonance contributes to a prominent increase in magnetic loss. In agreement with experiments, molecular dynamics simulations validate the enhancement of polarization-driven dielectric loss, while finite element simulation demonstrates the improved magnetic domain motion and magnetization mechanism. This study provides profound theoretical and computational insights into the electromagnetic response mechanism of yolk–shell structures, offering a valuable guidance for designing high-performance microwave absorbers.
KW - microwave absorption
KW - single-component FeO
KW - synergistic effects
KW - theoretical simulation
KW - yolk−shell engineering
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105033739794
U2 - 10.1021/acsami.6c00749
DO - 10.1021/acsami.6c00749
M3 - Article
C2 - 41818664
AN - SCOPUS:105033739794
SN - 1944-8244
VL - 18
SP - 17143
EP - 17155
JO - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
JF - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
IS - 11
ER -