| Literature DB >> 28736868 |
Bryan E Barton1, Michael J Behr1, Jasson T Patton1, Eric J Hukkanen1, Brian G Landes1, Weijun Wang1, Nicholas Horstman1, James E Rix2, Denis Keane2, Steven Weigand2, Mark Spalding1, Chris Derstine1.
Abstract
Currently, carbon fibers (CFs) from the solution spinning, air oxidation, and carbonization of polyacrylonitrile impose a lower price limit of ≈$10 per lb, limiting the growth in industrial and automotive markets. Polyethylene is a promising precursor to enable a high-volume industrial grade CF as it is low cost, melt spinnable and has high carbon content. However, sulfonated polyethylene (SPE)-derived CFs have thus far fallen short of the 200 GPa tensile modulus threshold for industrial applicability. Here, a graphitization process is presented catalyzed by the addition of boron that produces carbon fiber with >400 GPa tensile modulus at 2400 °C. Wide angle X-ray diffraction collected during carbonization reveals that the presence of boron reduces the onset of graphitization by nearly 400 °C, beginning around 1200 °C. The B-doped SPE-CFs herein attain 200 GPa tensile modulus and 2.4 GPa tensile strength at the practical carbonization temperature of 1800 °C.Entities:
Keywords: boron catalysis; carbon fibers; graphitization; sulfonation
Year: 2017 PMID: 28736868 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201701926
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281