The composition, structure and properties of four different glassy carbons
Loading...
Date
Authors
Shiell, Thomas
Wong, Sherman
Yang, Wenjie
Tanner, Christopher
Haberl, Bianca
Elliman, Robert
McKenzie, David R.
McCulloch, Dougal G.
Bradby, Jodie
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Glassy carbon (GC) is a class of disordered carbon materials that is known to be superelastic and non-graphitizing up to 3000 °C. The maximum heat treatment temperature is often used as a proxy to denote structure and physical properties. GC synthesised at low temperatures (~1000 °C) is often classified as Type I GC which has advantages of higher elastic modulus, resistance to oxidation, and lower permeability to gases. Type II GC is synthesised at higher temperatures (>2000 °C), has fewer impurities, is more electrically conductive, and is rated to a higher service temperature. Here Type I and II GC samples sourced from two suppliers are investigated using Rutherford backscattering spectrometry and elastic recoil detection analysis for composition, Raman spectroscopy, transmission electron microscope imaging, X-ray and neutron diffraction for structure determination, nanoindentation for mechanical properties, and Van der Pauw measurements for resistivity. The results show that the broad classifications of Type I or Type II do not correlate with the physical properties of the samples. We conclude that the quoted maximum heat treatment temperature alone is not sufficient to specify the properties of GC and that a careful microstructural examination of the material should be used to inform materials selection.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Journal of Non-crystalline Solids
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2037-12-31