Journal of Materials Research and Technology (Jan 2022)
Enhanced electromagnetic wave absorption performance of Ni–Zn ferrite through the added structural macroporosity
Abstract
Progressive utilization of wireless communications necessitates the use of electromagnetic wave absorber materials to assure a healthy environment for both devices and human beings by reducing the electromagnetic waves interference pollution. Nickel-zinc ferrite (Ni0.5Zn0.5Fe2O4) ceramic foam was successfully fabricated using the sacrificial templating method to be utilized as a low-density electromagnetic wave absorber. Structural, morphological, magnetic, and electromagnetic wave absorption properties of the samples were studied as a function of intentional porosity percentage by using modern characterization techniques of X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, micro-XRF, scanning electron microscopy, magnetic flux (B–H) analyzer, and vector network analyzer. SEM micrographs confirmed the uniform distribution of porosity with a mean diameter size of 50 μm. Magnetic measurements showed magnetic flux saturation (Bs) in the range of 85–203 mT and hysteresis loss up to 119 J m−3 for the Ni–Zn ferrite porous ceramics. Electromagnetic evaluations of the reticular ferrites manifested 99% attenuation of the incident electromagnetic waves with minimum reflection losses (RL) of about −30.6 to −38.3 dB at optimum thicknesses of 3.5–4.9 mm and the effective absorption bandwidth at RL = −20 dB up to 2 GHz. The high electromagnetic wave absorption performance in the broad 1–18 GHz region was attributed to the contribution of intrinsic magnetic/dielectric loss mechanisms of the sintered nickel-zinc ferrite body, the synergic attenuation effects of the foamy structure, and the impedance matching characteristics as a result of converging the permeability and permittivity.