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52. Graphitization of thin carbon films

โœ Scribed by A.E.B. Presland; J.R. White


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1965
Tongue
English
Weight
131 KB
Volume
3
Category
Article
ISSN
0008-6223

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โœฆ Synopsis


College, London, England). Thin carbon films, prepared by arc evaporation in vaeuo on to glass substrates, were heat treated at temperatures in the range lOOO-3OOO"C, and the crystal dimensions L, and L, measured, using electron diffraction and electron microscopy. The influence of variations in specimen thickness, evaporation pressure and heat treatment atmosphere on crystal size and orientation was examined. The behaviour during graphitization of films prepared by evaporation on heated graphite substrates was also investigated.

III. PYROLYTIC GRAPHITE

  1. The structure of pyrolytic carbon deposited in a fluidized bed* J. C. Bokros (General Atomic Division of General Dynamics Corporation, San Diego, California). A variety of pyrolytic-carbon structures deposited in fluidized beds have been categorized according to their structure. For a given coater configuration and flow rate, the structure of the deposits was found to vary systematically with bed temperature, gas composition, and bed surface area. The structures were divided into three groups according to their structure, i.e. laminar, isotropic, or granular. The structural data, together with kinetic measurements and published results on related processes, suggest that the low-temperature laminar structures are built up from large planar molecules that form in the gas phase, dehydrogenate, and, when deposited, align themselves parallel to each other and to the substrate. The isotropic low-density structures are formed at conditions where general gas-phase nucleation of droplets and soot occurs in the bed. The high-density granular structures form when there is orderly crystal growth over reiativefy large distances. *This work was supported by the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission under Contract AY(O4-3)-167. 54. Deformation and fracture of pyrolytic carbons deposited in a fluidized bed*

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