Many
substances with different chemical and physical properties, from diamonds to
graphite, are made up of carbon atoms. Amorphous forms of solid carbon do not
have a fixed crystal structure and consist of structural units--nanosized
graphene particles. A team of physicists from RUDN University studied the structure
of amorphous carbon and suggested classifying it as a separate type of
amorphous solid bodies: a molecular amorphic with enforced fragmentation.
Courtesy: RUDN University.
Many
substances with different chemical and physical properties, from diamonds to
graphite, are made up of carbon atoms. Amorphous forms of solid carbon do not
have a fixed crystal structure and consist of structural units—nanosized
graphene particles. A team of physicists from RUDN University studied the
structure of amorphous carbon and suggested classifying it as a separate type
of amorphous solid bodies: a molecular amorphic with enforced fragmentation.
The results of the study were published in the Fullerenes, Nanotubes and Carbon
Nanostructures journal.
Solid
carbon has many allotropic modifications. It means that substances with
different chemical and physical properties can be built from one and the same
atoms arranged in different structures. The variety of carbon allotropes is due
to the special properties of its atoms, namely their unique ability to form
single, double, and triple valence bonds. If, due to certain reaction
conditions, only single bonds are formed (i.e. the so-called sp3-hybridization
takes place), solid carbon has the shape of a three-dimensional grid of tetrahedrons,
i.e. a diamond. If the conditions are favorable for the formation of double
bonds (sp2-hybridization), solid carbon has the form of graphite—a structure of
flat layers made of comb-like hexagonal cells. Individual layers of this solid
body are called graphene. These two types of solid carbon structures are
observed both in ordered crystals and non-ordered amorphous bodies. Solid
carbon is widely spread in nature both as crystalline rock (graphite or
diamond) deposits and in the amorphous form (brown and black coal, shungite,
anthraxolite, and other minerals).
Unlike its
crystalline form, natural amorphous carbon belongs to the sp2 type. A major
study of the structure and elemental composition of sp2 amorphous carbon was
conducted at the initiative and with the participation of a team of physicists
from RUDN University. In the course of the study, the team also took spectral
measurements using photoelectronic spectroscopy, inelastic neutron scattering,
infrared absorption, and Raman scattering. Based on the results of the study,
the team concluded that sp2 amorphous carbon is a fractal structure based on
nanosized graphene domains that are surrounded by atoms of other elements
(hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, and so on). With this hypothesis, the team
virtually re-wrote the history of amorphous carbon that has been known to
humanity since the first-ever man-made fire.
"The
discovery and experimental confirmation of the graphene nature of the 'black
gold' will completely change the theory, modeling, and interpretation of
experiments with this class of substances. However, some questions remain
unanswered. What does solid-state physics make of this amorphous state of solid
carbon? What role does amorphous carbon with sp2-hybridization play in the bigger
picture? We tried to find our own answers," said Elena Sheka, a Ph.D. in
Physics and Mathematics, and a Consulting Professor at the Faculty of Physics
and Mathematics and Natural Sciences, RUDN University.
The team
spent two years thoroughly studying the nature of amorphous carbon. Other
results of this ambitious project were published in Fullerenes, Nanotubes and
Carbon Nanostructures, Journal of Physical Chemistry C, and Journal of
Non-Crystalline Solids, Nanomaterials. Together, these works confirm a
breakthrough achieved by the physicists of RUDN University in this complex
field of physics.
"We
have analyzed many studies on amorphous sp2 carbon from the point of view of
our general understanding of amorphous solid bodies. Based on our research, we
can confirm that it belongs to a new type of amorphous substances," added
Elena Sheka from RUDN University.