Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6630289 | Fuel | 2018 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Carbon-encapsulated iron nanoparticles (Fe@CNPs) with a high degree of graphitization, good integrity in the graphite shells, and high microwave-absorbing capability were prepared by first dissolving ferrocene into organic solvent and then being carbonized by MW-metal discharges under inert atmosphere. Four different organic solvents (benzene, cyclohexane, paraffin, and anhydrous ethanol) were tested, and well-graphitized Fe@CNPs were formed when using benzene or cyclohexane as the solvent. The use of MW-metal discharges with low-toxic cyclohexane and ferrocene as raw materials provides a new method for the preparation of Fe@CNPs with the merits of simplicity, low environmental impact, and high efficiency. The fabricated Fe@CNPs have excellent microwave-absorbing capability, which is respectively 29, 19.3, and 9.7 times those of carbonyl iron powder, SiC, and carbon nanotubes after 1-min microwave irradiation at 1000â¯W. The thermal gravimetric analysis demonstrates that the fabricated Fe@CNPs have good thermal stability. Owing to these properties, Fe@CNPs have the potential to shape nanoscale or micron scale high-energy sites for a vast variety of applications in the field of microwave chemistry.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
Jing Sun, Yican Wang, Wenlong Wang, Ke Wang, Jiaxin Lu,