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Analyzing SiC/Co materials for radar absorption and EMI shielding using ARL X’TRA Companion XRD

Applications | 2025 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
XRD
Industries
Materials Testing
Manufacturer
Thermo Fisher Scientific

Summary

Significance of the Topic


Silicon carbide–cobalt composites represent a multifunctional class of radar-absorbing and electromagnetic interference shielding materials that integrate dielectric and magnetic loss mechanisms. Their high thermal and mechanical stability extends performance beyond polymer-based absorbers, making them critical for defense and aerospace applications where reliable broadband absorption and structural integrity under extreme conditions are required.

Goals and Study Overview


This study aims to characterize the phase composition, microstructure, and crystalline-to-amorphous balance of a SiC/Co composite using X-ray diffraction (XRD). By quantifying SiC polytypes, cobalt phases, and amorphous content, the work correlates structural parameters with electromagnetic performance metrics to guide materials optimization for EMI shielding and radar absorption.

Instrumental Setup


The ARL X’TRA Companion XRD system was employed in Bragg–Brentano (θ/θ) geometry with a 160 mm radius goniometer. Key features include:
  • 600 W Cu Kα X-ray source (λ = 1.541874 Å)
  • Radial and axial beam collimation via divergence and Soller slits
  • Variable beam knife to reduce air scattering
  • State-of-the-art solid-state pixel detector (55 × 55 µm pitch) for rapid data acquisition
  • Integration with SolstiX Pronto software for single-click Rietveld refinement and LIMS connectivity

Methodology


A powdered SiC/Co sample was pressed into a top-loading cup and measured in reflection mode with sample spinning for 10 minutes. Rietveld refinements were performed using Profex software, while the PONKCS method quantified the amorphous fraction. Structural parameters—phase fractions, crystallite sizes, lattice constants, and microstrain—were extracted and analyzed.

Main Results and Discussion


Rietveld analysis identified the following phases and features:
  • SiC polytypes 3C (crystallite size ~14 nm, 23.6 wt%) and 6H (31 nm, 14.9 wt%)
  • Face-centered cubic cobalt nanoparticles (~30 nm, 39.0 wt%) with a refined lattice parameter of a ≈ 0.3555 nm
  • Minor silicon phase (~9 nm, 8.3 wt%)
  • Amorphous SiOC/oxide shell (~14.3 wt%) modeled via PONKCS
Peak broadening patterns revealed anisotropic microstrain attributable to dislocation networks rather than stacking faults. No hexagonal cobalt phase was detected. The cobalt content (~15 vol%) approaches the percolation threshold, enabling fine tuning of dielectric–magnetic balance for broadband absorption or higher coercivity as needed.

Benefits and Practical Applications


The ARL X’TRA Companion XRD platform provides rapid (10 minute) data collection and automated phase quantification, supporting:
  • Accurate identification of SiC polytypes and metallic cobalt phases
  • Reliable amorphous content measurement via PONKCS
  • Quantification of microstrain effects linked to magnetic loss properties
These insights facilitate targeted adjustments to composition and processing to achieve optimized EMI shielding efficacy and radar absorption across desired frequency bands.

Future Trends and Potential Applications


Emerging directions include in situ XRD studies during thermal or mechanical treatment to monitor phase transformations in real time, integration of machine learning algorithms for automated pattern recognition and prediction of electromagnetic properties, and exploration of cobalt hexagonal phase formation via controlled annealing to further tailor magnetic response.

Conclusion


This work demonstrates that detailed XRD analysis of SiC/Co composites yields critical structural parameters—phase composition, crystallite size, lattice metrics, and microstrain—that directly inform the design of advanced radar-absorbing and EMI shielding materials. The rapid, automated capabilities of the ARL X’TRA Companion system enable efficient development and quality control of high-performance composites for demanding applications.

Reference


[1] Döbelin N, Kleeberg R. Profex: a graphical user interface for the Rietveld refinement program BGMN. J Appl Cryst. 2015;48:1573–1580.
[2] Scarlett NVY, Madsen IC. Quantification of amorphous and crystalline phases using XRD. Powder Diffr. 2006;21(4):278–284.

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