1 / 13

An Investigation into the Production and Application of Carbon nanofibers

An Investigation into the Production and Application of Carbon nanofibers. By Russell Petrie Supervisor: Professor P J Hall. Introduction. Carbon Precursor Fiber Diameter vs. Surface Area Electrospinning Technique Heat Treatments Characterization Results Conclusion. Carbon Precursor.

maeko
Download Presentation

An Investigation into the Production and Application of Carbon nanofibers

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. An Investigation into the Production and Application of Carbon nanofibers By Russell Petrie Supervisor: Professor P J Hall

  2. Introduction • Carbon Precursor • Fiber Diameter vs. Surface Area • Electrospinning Technique • Heat Treatments • Characterization • Results • Conclusion

  3. Carbon Precursor • Coal Tar pitch • 55ºC Softening Point • Filtration and Distillation • n-methyl pyrrolidinone solution

  4. Fiber Diameter vs. Surface Area

  5. Protective plastic cover Resistor Plastic Syringe Syringe Pump V Hollow Needle Stand High Voltage Generator Collector Plate Electrospinning Technique • 15 kV Potential Difference • Rapid Diameter Shrinkage • Water Bath

  6. Heat Treatments • 350ºC Stabilisation - Sets fiber structure and removes some organic compounds • 1100ºC Carbonisation - Removes non-carbon elements including nitrogen • 1500ºC Graphitisation - Little weight loss, aligns and improves crystallite structure in carbon fiber

  7. Characterisation • Softening Point Test • Weight Loss • BET surface area • SANS (Small Angle Neutron Scattering) • Microscopy

  8. Results • The softening point is determined when the viscosity starts to rise sharply, this is usually in the region of 3500-4000 Pa.s Softening Point Test

  9. Weight Loss • 350ºC Stabilisation - 26% weight loss • 350ºC - 1100ºC Carbonisation - 79% loss • 350ºC - 1500ºC Graphitisation - 70% loss

  10. BET • N2 Adsorption at 77K • Type II Isotherm • Hysteresis • Surface Area - 266m2/g

  11. SANS • Data corrected for background and sample holder scattering • Contrast matched using deutrerated toluene • Data suggests non-porous structure

  12. Microscopy • 50x Magnification • Fig 1. Melt spun carbon fiber, 40mm diameter • Fig 2. Fiber spun on glass slide • Fig 3. Fiber spun onto water • Fig 4. Stabilised fiber Fig 1 Fig 2 Fig 3 Fig 4

  13. Conclusions • Novel technique to produce carbon nanofibers • Produces high surface area carbons without porous structure • Potential use in the fuel cell field as catalyst supports

More Related