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John
Lv 6
John asked in Science & MathematicsChemistry · 8 years ago

flexibility of carbon fibres?

The strong covalent bonds in diamond and graphite lead to rigid structures. Graphite might be slippery, but it's not flexible in the least.

So how come carbon fibres aren't brittle?

How do they put together carbon fibres together so they can be tough and resilient and springy?

1 Answer

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  • John
    Lv 7
    8 years ago
    Favourite answer

    Each carbon filament thread is a bundle of many thousand carbon filaments. A single such filament is a thin tube with a diameter of 5–8 micrometers and consists almost exclusively of carbon. The earliest generation of carbon fibers (e.g. T300, HTA and AS4) had diameters of 7–8 micrometers.[2] Later fibers (e.g. IM6 or IM600) have diameters that are approximately 5 micrometers.[2]

    The atomic structure of carbon fiber is similar to that of graphite, consisting of sheets of carbon atoms (graphene sheets) arranged in a regular hexagonal pattern. The difference lies in the way these sheets interlock. Graphite is a crystalline material in which the sheets are stacked parallel to one another in regular fashion. The intermolecular forces between the sheets are relatively weak Van der Waals forces, giving graphite its soft and brittle characteristics. Depending upon the precursor to make the fiber, carbon fiber may be turbostratic or graphitic, or have a hybrid structure with both graphitic and turbostratic parts present. In turbostratic carbon fiber the sheets of carbon atoms are haphazardly folded, or crumpled, together. Carbon fibers derived from Polyacrylonitrile (PAN) are turbostratic, whereas carbon fibers derived from mesophase pitch are graphitic after heat treatment at temperatures exceeding 2200 C. Turbostratic carbon fibers tend to have high tensile strength, whereas heat-treated mesophase-pitch-derived carbon fibers have high Young's modulus (i.e., high stiffness or resistance to extension under load) and high thermal conductivity.

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