The electric resistivities were measured for textured compacts of the intercalation compounds of graphite with SbF, and with SbC&. Starting materials were coarse flakes of natural graphite and graphite foils (0.35 and 2 mm thick). First stage compounds and mixtures of first and second stage compound
Electrical resistivity and magnetoresistance of carbon/graphite fibers intercalated with nitric acid and arsenic pentafluoride
✍ Scribed by W.David Lee; Glenn P. Davis; F.Lincoln Vogel
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1985
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 721 KB
- Volume
- 23
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-6223
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✦ Synopsis
series of high performance, experimental carbon/graphite fibers was intercalated and examined with respect to their metallic conductivity behavior by resistivity and magnetoresistance versus temperature measurements.
One fiber was a polyacrylonitrile (PAN&type precursor and three were pitch base precursors. All four types showed substantially similar behavior in the pristine state with respect to room temperature resistivity and the sign and magnitude of the temperature coefficient of resistivity. After intercalation with either nitric acid or nitric acid followed by AsF,, the PAN-based fibers displayed a resistivity versus temperature behavior qualitatively similar to their pristine counterparts but displaced to lower resistivity. On the other hand, the pitch fibers with the same intercalation treatment exhibited metallic behavior (a positive temperature coefficient of electrical resistivity and a small magnetoresistance).
These manifestations of metallic behavior are usually indicative of some three dimensional graphite structure in the carbon fibers.
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