| Literature DB >> 20652145 |
M P Manoharan, H Lee, R Rajagopalan, H C Foley, M A Haque.
Abstract
Glassy carbon is a disordered, nanoporous form of carbon with superior thermal and chemical stability in extreme environments. Freestanding glassy carbon specimens with 4-6 nm thickness and 0.5 nm average pore size were synthesized and fabricated from polyfurfuryl alcohol precursors. Elastic properties of the specimens were measured in situ inside a scanning electron microscope using a custom-built micro-electro-mechanical system. The Young's modulus, fracture stress and strain values were measured to be about 62 GPa, 870 MPa and 1.3%, respectively; showing strong size effects compared to a modulus value of 30 GPa at the bulk scale. This size effect is explained on the basis of the increased significance of surface elastic properties at the nanometer length-scale.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20652145 PMCID: PMC2894143 DOI: 10.1007/s11671-009-9435-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Figure 1a Schematic of the nanoscale uniaxial tensile testing device showing the thermal actuator and the integrated force and displacement sensing beams (not to scale). b Force equilibrium spring equivalent of the specimen-device system. c SEM image of the device
Figure 2a Raman spectra and b transmission electron micrograph for the freestanding glassy carbon film (scale bar is 20 nm)
Figure 3a SEM image of the freestanding ultrathin glassy carbon specimen mounted on the test device before loading. b The specimen after loading to fracture (scale bar is 50µm)
Figure 4Stress–strain diagram for a 5 nm-thick freestanding glassy carbon film
Figure 5Effect of surface stresses on the Young’s modulus value (based on Eq. 3); inset shows detailed view of the variation of modulus values for film thickness up to 10 nm