Heterostructured TiO2/C/Co
nanomaterial has been derived
from a carbonized zeolitic imidazolate (ZIF-67) porous framework.
The obtained uniform nanospheres wrapped with TiO2 have
shown superior microwave absorption properties. Traditionally, the
interaction of phonons within a confined system in terms of microwave
absorption has not been studied in the literature to date. Here, we
demonstrate that the phonon confinement is pivotal in the improvement
of impedance matching, besides the multiple interfacial dielectric
relaxations at different dielectric media (TiO2/C, C/Co)
in the composite. Because of the specially crafted phonon confinement
and multiple interface dielectric relaxations, the as-synthesized
(TiO2/C/Co) composite manifests a maximum reflection loss
of −42 dB with a broad bandwidth of 5 GHz. This work explains
the possible mechanism of electromagnetic shielding in a confined
system with multiple interfaces and may lead to design of advanced
materials for microwave shielding.