RESUMEN
Acoustic absorption materials play an important role in eliminating the negative effects of noise. Herein, a polyvinyl alcohol (PVA)-assisted freeze-casting was developed for controllably fabricating reduced graphene oxide wrapped carbon nanofiber (RGO@CNF)/graphene oxide composite aerogel. During the freeze-casting, PVA was used as an icing inhibitor to control the size of ice crystals. While the concentration of PVA increased from 0 to 15â mg â ml-1 , the average pore size of the aerogel was reduced from 154 to 45â µm. Due to the modulation of the pore size and composition, the propagation path and friction loss for sound were optimized, especially at low frequency. For instance, the normalized sound absorption coefficient of RGO@CNF/GO-10 achieves 0.79 (250-6300â Hz). The sample also exhibits a desirable microwave absorbing property whose maximum reflection loss is -47.3â dB (9.44 GHz, d=3.0â mm). Prospectively, this synthetic strategy can be extended to develop other forms of elastic aerogel with a controlled pore size.
RESUMEN
Presently, piezoelectric materials are gradually playing a significant role within composites to improve the damping and vibrational attenuation capacities of host composites. Previous studies paid attention to isolating the mechanical damping contribution and piezoelectric contribution of polymer-based piezoelectric composites (PPCs). However, reports detailing the piezoelectric damping of such materials have not paid sufficient attention to the technologies and methods to improve the piezoelectric damping of PPCs. In this study, we propose novel damping polyurethane (PU)-based piezoelectric composites with carbon-coated piezoelectric fillers (PZT@C/PU) with improved piezoelectric damping ability. The mechanical damping and piezoelectric damping of composites were theoretically decoupled, and we elaborate on the mechanism enhancing piezoelectric damping through the carbon coating strategy by comparing with the composites with nonpiezoelectric fillers. The as-fabricated core-shell structure having an optimized interface exhibits the proposed PZT@C/PU composite pads with relatively prominent damping ability (loss factor tan δmax = 1.0, tan δRT = 0.3), ductility (400.63%), and sound isolating behavior (transmission loss TL > 23 dB). Moreover, the vibration test results of as-fabricated sandwich structural PZT@C/PU composite damping devices exhibit outstanding vibration attenuating behavior (damping ratio ζ = 0.198). The study herein validates that the carbon shell coated on piezoelectric fillers would effectively increase damping performance of PU-based piezoelectric composites by the enhancement of piezoelectric performance caused by carbon coating piezoelectric fillers, which indicates that this material has potential for future applications in the field of vibration and noise reduction, thereby driving forward and expanding the fundamental understanding in the area of PPCs damping and vibration attenuation.