| Literature DB >> 25648723 |
Zhisheng Zhao1, Erik F Wang2, Hongping Yan1, Yoshio Kono1, Bin Wen3, Ligang Bai1, Feng Shi4, Junfeng Zhang4, Curtis Kenney-Benson1, Changyong Park1, Yanbin Wang5, Guoyin Shen1.
Abstract
Type-II glass-like carbon is a widely used material with a unique combination of properties including low density, high strength, extreme impermeability to gas and liquid and resistance to chemical corrosion. It can be considered as a carbon-based nanoarchitectured material, consisting of a disordered multilayer graphene matrix encasing numerous randomly distributed nanosized fullerene-like spheroids. Here we show that under both hydrostatic compression and triaxial deformation, this high-strength material is highly compressible and exhibits a superelastic ability to recover from large strains. Under hydrostatic compression, bulk, shear and Young's moduli decrease anomalously with pressure, reaching minima around 1-2 GPa, where Poisson's ratio approaches zero, and then revert to normal behaviour with positive pressure dependences. Controlling the concentration, size and shape of fullerene-like spheroids with tailored topological connectivity to graphene layers is expected to yield exceptional and tunable mechanical properties, similar to mechanical metamaterials, with potentially wide applications.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25648723 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms7212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919