Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5431780 Carbon 2017 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

This work provides the first explicit report of the linear absorption coefficient α of materials in the radio frequency regime (0.1-1.5 GHz). The coefficient decreases with increasing carbon thickness. The highest α (940 mm−1) is provided by the smallest carbon thickness (7 μm). The lowest α (38 mm−1) is provided by the largest carbon thickness (460 μm). For carbon thicknesses that are much larger than the skin depth, α is essentially independent of the thickness. For any frequency, α depends negligibly on the carbon structure, as its values for carbon fiber, carbon nanofiber and flexible graphite fall on the same curve of α vs. carbon thickness. This is expected from the wavelength being long (30 cm at 1 GHz) compared to the carbon microstructural dimensions. At frequencies ≥0.3 GHz, the decrease of α with the carbon thickness is approximately exponential, with the exponent related to the inverse of the skin depth. At 0.1 GHz, α tends to be below the value based on the exponential function. An absorption edge (with α increasing with increasing frequency) occurs at 0.5-1.0 GHz, as shown for carbon fiber mat.

Graphical abstractDecrease of the linear absorption coefficient α with increasing carbon thickness, with the experimental data points for carbon fiber (●), carbon nanofiber (○) and flexible graphite (Δ) falling on the same curve (not shown). The solid curve is the theoretical exponential curve for carbon fiber resistivity 1.2 × 10−3 Ω cm; the dashed curve is the theoretical exponential curve for flexible graphite resistivity 7.5 × 10−4 Ω cm. The frequency is 1 GHz.Download high-res image (90KB)Download full-size image

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy (General)
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