Scientists
from the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces,
working together with colleagues from the University
of Vienna and the European Synchrotron Radiation
Facility in Grenoble, France have made the first-ever
observations of nanocrystallite buckling in carbon
fibres. The results indicate that missing cross-links
between the individual carbon layers are responsible
for the buckling. (Physical Review Letters, November
25, 2005). Such a finding has implications for the
way high-tech carbon materials are produced.
High-strength, ultra-light and elastic carbon materials
are commonly used in high-performance sports goods
and modern aerospace technology - for example in
tennis rackets, racing tyres, heat shields and even
guitars. Carbon fibres are only a few micrometres
thick and mainly used to mechanically reinforce other
materials, like polymers, metals, and ceramics. In
tension, these kinds of fibres are stronger than
most other known materials. However, compression
applied parallel to the fibre axis can cause the
buckling of nanoscale carbon layers - comparable
to the buckling of a long, thin rod under compressive
load.
In a novel physical experiment at the European Synchrotron
Radiation Facility in Grenoble, researchers from
Potsdam, Germany and Vienna have threaded both ends
of micrometre thick carbon fibres through thin hollow
needles in order to form fibre loops. The fibres
are stretched on the outside of the loop and compressed
on the inside. In-between there is a neutral zone, as we might find in a bent
beam. By tugging on the ends of the fibres, the scientists were able to adjust
the loop's radius, and thus also the mechanical load in the tensile and the compression
region. Oskar Paris from the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces
explains that "what is unique about the experiment is that we can make observations
at many length-scales and thus gather evidence about the secret of ‘nano-buckling'.
Using a 100-nanometre wide x-ray beam, we can scan the differently distorted
regions along the cross-section of the fibre. Our nano-magnifier - the diffraction
of the x-ray beam -allows us to measure the local strains of the only some nanometres
thick carbon layers, as well as their orientation with respect to the fibre axis."
High-tech carbon fibres are made of graphite-like carbon sheets with strong covalent
atomic bonding within the sheets, and weak Van der Waals bonding between them.
Almost all the physical properties - and particularly mechanical behaviour -
of these materials depend on their orientation. Their tensile stiffness is as
much as five times higher than that of steel, and their specific tensile strength
can overcome that of steel by a factor of ten. Under compression, however, the
fibres can fail. Here, the mechanical behaviour is determined by mechanical instability
- carbon layers buckling at the nanoscale - in addition to the shearing of single
carbon layers.
In spite of this, some carbon fibres exhibit astoundingly good shear properties.
In these cases, "nano-buckling" is rarely observed - which suggests the existence
of a substantial number of strong cross-links between the carbon layers. Herwig
Peterlik from the University of Vienna explains that "if we could reinforce the
usually very weak connections between the carbon layers in a controlled way using
this kind of covalent cross-links, then in addition to carbon fibres, the highly-vaunted
new carbon nanotubes would be almost ready to make the strongest ropes in the
world."
This has been possible very recently with electron irradiation, which requires
however a high expenditure of money and energy. The high price is also the major
reason why carbon fibres, which are relatively cheap to produce, are not easily
replaced by modern nanotubes. The question why these valuable cross-links occur
only in some carbon fibres, while others buckle, still remains unclear.
Original work:
Dieter Loidl, Oskar Paris, Manfred Burghammer, Christian Riekel and Herwig Peterlik
Direct observation of nanocrystallite buckling in carbon fibers under bending
load
Physical Review
Contact:
Dr. Oskar Paris
Max
Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces , Potsdam
Tel.: +49 331 567-9411
Fax: +49 331 567-9402
E-mail: Oskar.Paris@mpikg.mpg.de
Prof. Herwig Peterlik
Institute of Materials
Physics, University of Vienna , Vienna
Tel.: +43 1 4277 51350
Fax: +43 1 4277 9513
E-mail: Herwig.Peterlik@univie.ac.at
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