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A Universal Laser-Driven Controllable Synthesis Methodology Enabling Electromagnetic Absorption in High-Entropy Rare-Earth Oxides

  • Peng Wei
  • , Yiwen Liu
  • , Hao Bai
  • , Lei Zhuang
  • , Hulei Yu
  • , Zibin Chen
  • , Yanhui Chu

Research output: Journal article publicationJournal articleAcademic researchpeer-review

Abstract

Imparting electromagnetic absorption functionality is key to realizing integrated structural and functional applications of high-entropy rare-earth oxides (HEREOs). Here, a laser-driven controllable synthesis (LDCS) technique is reported to achieve this long-desired goal. Specifically, utilizing this approach, all polymorphs of high-entropy rare-earth disilicates (HEREDs), including unreported δ-, F-, and G-type phases with up to 20 principal elements are successfully synthesized. Crucially, it is demonstrated that a G-type 20-cation HERED is conferred with exceptional electromagnetic wave absorption: an effective absorption bandwidth profoundly broadened from 0.01 to 5.26 GHz. This enhancement is attributed to a laser-induced generation of extensive oxygen vacancies, which markedly increases conductance in electrical insulating HEREOs, and an exacerbation of nanointerface polarization loss caused by intensified local chemical order inherent to the incorporation of 20 constituent elements. The universality of this LDCS technique in enabling electromagnetic wave absorption across diverse HEREO families, including monosilicates, hafnates, zirconates, tantalates, niobates, and aluminates is finally verified, making them promising as radar stealth and thermal/environmental barrier integrated coating materials for use in hot section components of aircraft engines.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere20122
Number of pages11
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume38
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Feb 2026

Keywords

  • electromagnetic wave absorption
  • high-entropy rare-earth disilicates
  • high-entropy rare-earth oxides
  • Laser-driven synthesis

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Materials Science
  • Mechanics of Materials
  • Mechanical Engineering

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