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Investigation of Woven Characteristics on Electromagnetic Shielding Behaviour

Authors :
Christine Campagne
M Javadi Toghchi
Aurélie Cayla
Carmen Loghin
I Cristian
Pascal Bruniaux
Source :
IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering. 374:012009
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2018.

Abstract

Textiles have been highly applied for electromagnetic shielding purposes due to the increasing concern about health issues caused by human exposure to radiation. Properties of conductive yarn, fabric structure, and garment design have extreme effects on the electromagnetic behaviour and comfort of the final product. Lots of electromagnetic shielding textiles are made of metallic yarns regarding their high electrical conductivity. Therefore, some researchers have worked on electromagnetic shielding textiles made of metals. For example; the shielding effectiveness of woven fabrics made of hybrid yarns containing stainless steel wire was investigated. As discussed earlier, the fabric structure has significant effects on electromagnetic protection. Consequently, woven samples were produced using two different commercial electroconductive yarns (PA12 coated with Ag and Inox) to investigate the effects of the fabric structure. The main purpose was to define the best pattern among three basic woven patterns leads to the highest electromagnetic shielding. Moreover, the different weft yarn densities were applied to examine the effects of yarn density on the level of electromagnetic shielding. The electromagnetic shielding effectiveness of all the 2-layer samples was evaluated in the frequency range from 0.8 to10 GHz in an anechoic chamber. The woven sample with higher yarn density of PA12 coated with Ag yarns shows higher protection against radiation. To conclude, the results show that the yarn properties play the main role in shielding as well as yarn density and fabric pattern.

Details

ISSN :
1757899X and 17578981
Volume :
374
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0133f77d8163aaecc17822fc65b706ba
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1757-899x/374/1/012009