Structure Studies of Graded Amorphous Carbon Obtained by Liquid Carbon Quenching

VS Dozhdikov and AY Basharin and PR Levashov, TECHNICAL PHYSICS, 69, 1170-1180 (2024).

DOI: 10.1134/S1063784224040108

A new method for obtaining graded amorphous carbon using quenching of a graphite melt on a diamond substrate is proposed. Using molecular dynamics modeling of liquid carbon quenching on a cold diamond substrate, it is shown that the amorphous carbon obtained in the experiment is a material with a strongly gradient structure and properties along the depth of the sample. This is due to the quenching rate decrease with the distance from the substrate in the range of 1014-1012 K/s. In this case, the density of amorphous carbon varies from 1.50 to 1.93 g/cm3. The spatial change in the structural characteristics of the obtained amorphous carbon was studied: the distribution of carbon atoms according to the degree of chemical bond hybridization (sp1-, sp2-, sp3-), the radial distribution function, the angular distribution function, and a statistical analysis of carbon rings were carried out. It is shown that at a pressure in liquid of 1 GPa, the carbon structure within the quenched zone changes from a highly porous structure with a large number of sp1 chains of carbon atoms near the substrate to an amorphous graphene structure at the periphery.

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