Nature Communications (Oct 2024)

Carbon nanolayer-mounted single metal sites enable dipole polarization loss under electromagnetic field

  • Siyao Cheng,
  • Daohu Sheng,
  • Soumya Mukherjee,
  • Wei Dong,
  • Yuanbiao Huang,
  • Rong Cao,
  • Aming Xie,
  • Roland A. Fischer,
  • Weijin Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-53465-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Surface modulation strategies have spurred great interest with regard to regulating the morphology, dispersion and flexible processability of materials. Unsurprisingly, customized modulation of surfaces is primed to offer a route to control their electronic functions. To regulate electromagnetic wave (EMW) absorption applications by surface engineering is an unmet challenge. Thanks to pyrolyzing surface-anchored metal-porphyrin, here we report on the surface modulation of four-nitrogen atoms-confined single metal site on a nitrogen-doped carbon layer (sM(N4)@NC, M = Ni, Co, Cu, Ni/Cu) (sM=single metal; NC= nitrogen-doped carbon layer) that registers electromagnetic wave absorption. Surface-anchored metal-porphyrins are afforded by attaching them onto the polypyrrole surface via a prototypical click reaction. Further, sM(N4)@NC is experimentally found to elicit an identical dipole polarization loss mechanism, overcoming the handicaps of conductivity loss, defects, and interfacial polarization loss among the current EMW absorber models. Importantly, sM(N4)@NC is found to exhibit an effective absorption bandwidth of 6.44 and reflection loss of −51.7 dB, preceding state-of-the-art carbon-based EMW absorbers. This study introduces a surface modulation strategy to design EMW absorbers based on single metal sites that enable fine-tunable and controlled absorption mechanism with atomistic precision.