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Mao-Sheng Cao

Researcher at Beijing Institute of Technology

Publications -  346
Citations -  33083

Mao-Sheng Cao is an academic researcher from Beijing Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dielectric & Microwave. The author has an hindex of 81, co-authored 314 publications receiving 24046 citations. Previous affiliations of Mao-Sheng Cao include Tsinghua University & Harbin Institute of Technology.

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The effects of temperature and frequency on the dielectric properties, electromagnetic interference shielding and microwave-absorption of short carbon fiber/silica composites

TL;DR: In this paper, a dielectric spectroscopy of short carbon fiber/silica composite in the frequency range from 8.2 to 12.4 GHz at temperatures between 30 and 600°C has been performed.
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Reduced graphene oxides: light-weight and high-efficiency electromagnetic interference shielding at elevated temperatures.

TL;DR: Chemical graphitized r-GOs, as the thinnest and lightest material in the carbon family, exhibit high-efficiency electromagnetic interference shielding at elevated temperature, attributed to the cooperation of dipole polarization and hopping conductivity.
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Temperature dependent microwave attenuation behavior for carbon-nanotube/silica composites

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the dielectric properties and microwave attenuation performances over the full X-band (8.2-12.4 GHz) at a wide temperature ranging from 100 to 500 °C.
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Ferroferric Oxide/Multiwalled Carbon Nanotube vs Polyaniline/Ferroferric Oxide/Multiwalled Carbon Nanotube Multiheterostructures for Highly Effective Microwave Absorption

TL;DR: Ferroferric oxide (Fe(3)O(4)) was selected as the phase in multiwalled carbon nanotube (MWCNT)-based composites for enhancing magnetic properties to obtain improved electromagnetic attenuation and exhibited enhanced magnetic properties coupled with increased dielectric properties.
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Thermally Driven Transport and Relaxation Switching Self-Powered Electromagnetic Energy Conversion.

TL;DR: Graphene networks with "well-sequencing genes" can serve as nanogenerators, thermally promoting electromagnetic wave absorption by 250%, with broadened bandwidth covering the whole investigated frequency, opening up an unexpected horizon for converting, storing, and reusing waste electromagnetic energy.