Compressed glassy carbon: An ultrastrong and elastic interpenetrating graphene network
Author(s) -
Meng Hu,
Julong He,
Zhisheng Zhao,
Timothy A. Strobel,
Wentao Hu,
Dongli Yu,
Hao Sun,
Lingyu Liu,
Zihe Li,
Mengdong Ma,
Yoshio Kono,
Jinfu Shu,
Hokwang Mao,
Yingwei Fei,
Guoyin Shen,
Yanbin Wang,
Stephen J. Juhl,
Jianyu Huang,
Zhongyuan Liu,
Bo Xu,
Yongjun Tian
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.1603213
Subject(s) - graphene , materials science , carbon fibers , compression (physics) , glassy carbon , composite material , electrical conductor , nanotechnology , composite number , chemistry , electrode , cyclic voltammetry , electrochemistry
Carbon’s unique ability to have both sp2 and sp3 bonding states gives rise to a range of physical attributes, including excellent mechanical and electrical properties. We show that a series of lightweight, ultrastrong, hard, elastic, and conductive carbons are recovered after compressing sp2-hybridized glassy carbon at various temperatures. Compression induces the local buckling of graphene sheets through sp3 nodes to form interpenetrating graphene networks with long-range disorder and short-range order on the nanometer scale. The compressed glassy carbons have extraordinary specific compressive strengths—more than two times that of commonly used ceramics—and simultaneously exhibit robust elastic recovery in response to local deformations. This type of carbon is an optimal ultralight, ultrastrong material for a wide range of multifunctional applications, and the synthesis methodology demonstrates potential to access entirely new metastable materials with exceptional properties.
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