Chengwei Fana,
Yifan Liub,
Jiayao Zhua,
Luxiang Wanga,
Xiaohong Chenb,
Su Zhang*a,
Huaihe Song*b and
Dianzeng Jia*a
aKey Laboratory of Energy Materials Chemistry, Ministry of Education, Key Laboratory of Advanced Functional Materials, Autonomous Region, Institute of Applied Chemistry, Xinjiang University, Urumqi, 830046, P. R. China. E-mail: suzhangs@163.com; jdz@xju.edu.cn
bState Key Laboratory of Chemical Resource Engineering, Beijing Key Laboratory of Electrochemical Process and Technology for Materials, Beijing University of Chemical Technology, Beijing, 100029, P. R. China. E-mail: songhh@mail.buct.edu.cn
First published on 20th September 2019
Understanding the structural transformation of carbon black during high temperature treatment and the underlying mechanism are very important because of the correlation with nanocarbon species such as fullerenes and carbon onions. Herein, we find that carbon black nanoparticles exhibit a solid skin–core structure constructed from small graphene flakes. The skin shows a more ordered structure than the core. During heating treatment in an inert atmosphere, the small graphene flakes coalesce together to form large-area lamellae at 1600 °C. Then, the solid spherical nanoparticles completely transform to hollow polyhedra at 1800 °C with significantly improved crystallinity. What's more, the inner cores of carbon black can be removed through simple oxidation in air, demonstrating that the cores are more disordered and reactive than the skin. Accordingly, the structural transformation mechanism is ascribed to well-ordered graphitic shells being preferentially formed by coalescing ordered small graphene flakes in the skin region of carbon black nanoparticles. The multilocular hollow structure is subsequently formed by reconstruction of highly disordered and twisted inner cores in a confined space.
CB is commonly prepared by pyrolysis of carbon-rich precursors such as natural gas, pitch, and aromatic heavy oil at high temperature above 1200 °C. The possible CB formation mechanism was proposed by Donnet et al.18 and Bourrat et al.19 It involves three stages: (I) nucleation, transformation of gaseous hydrocarbon precursor to small solid or liquid carbon nucleus at high temperature; (II) growth (aggregation), deposition of carbonaceous components on the nucleus to form 10–50 nm spherical particles; and (III) agglomeration, coalescence of the as-formed nanoparticles along with the further deposition to form a multilocular structure.3,17 Therefore, formation of the skin–core structure is attributed to: (I) in the nucleation stage, hydrocarbon molecules undergo complex decomposition and polymerization processes, resulting in the formation of twisted polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. These polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons loose stack together to form primary solid carbon nucleus (cores) with the diameter of several nanometers. (II) In the later growth stage, pyrolytic carbon deposition continuously occurs on the nucleus (cores), resulting in the formation of relatively dense and ordered carbon skin. Therefore, the outer carbon skin in CB shows higher crystallinity than that of inner carbon core.
Thermal treatment is the most common route to modulate the structure and property of CB.20–24 For example, the crystallinity and electric conductivity can be significantly improved by high temperature graphitization.7,10,21 Interestingly, a structural transformation of carbon nanoparticles from solid nano-spheres to hollow nano-polyhedra through high temperature treatment has been realized in the previous works.20–26 But clear observation and deep investigation of this transformation process are still absent so far. In particular, the structural transformation process at different temperatures is not revealed. Herein, a typical N330 CB was thermal treated at different temperatures ranging from 1500 to 2800 °C in inert atmosphere, and a general structural transformation from solid spherical nanoparticles to hollow nano-polyhedra is investigated in detail. The transformation mechanism is deduced to the coalescence and reconstruction of small graphene flakes in the skin and core of CB nanoparticles. Our work can help to understand the structure of CB during high temperature treatment, which may also extends to other nanocarbons such as fullerenes and carbon onions.
Fig. 1 TEM images of (a) N330, (b) N330-1500, (c) N330-1600, (d) N330-1800, (e) N330-2000, and (f) N330-2800. |
Fig. 2 HRTEM images of (a) N330, (b) N330-1500, (c) N330-1600, (d) N330-1800, (e) N330-2000, and (f) N330-2800; (g) structural transformation model according to the HRTEM images. |
The characteristic (002) and (100) diffraction peaks are clearly identified at ca. 26 and 43° in the XRD patterns of the samples (Fig. 3a). A broad and dispersive peak located at 24.5° in the spectrum of N330 CB indicates its amorphous feature.5–9 With the rising of heating temperature, the (002) peak is gradually shifted to high degree of 26°. And the diffraction peaks are significantly sharped, demonstrating the significantly improved crystallinity. The ratio of the intensity to the full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the (002) peak located at ca. 26° of each sample is used to express the crystallinity of each sample (Fig. 3b).27 The slight crystallinity increase from N330 to N330-1500 is due to the partially coalesced graphene flakes in the skin region, as observed from the HRTEM image in Fig. 2b. The crystallinity of the samples shows a rapid increase after 1600 °C, reaching to a plateau above 2000 °C. This indicates the coalescence of small graphene flakes and gradual formation of large-area ordered graphitic structure with the increasing of treating temperature, which is in accordance with the HRTEM observation in Fig. 2.
The peaks located at ca. 1350 and 1580 cm−1 in the Raman spectra (Fig. 3c) are the D- and G-band, respectively. The broad and dispersive G band and the intensive D band of the N330 CB indicate that it is constructed by large numbers of microcrystallites separated by a considerable amount of amorphous regions.10,11 The D-band are weakened and the G-band are sharpened along with the rising of treating temperature, also demonstrating the formation of large area graphitic conjugated structure by coalescence and merging of the small graphene fragments in N330 CB.10,28 Moreover, the 2D-band located at 2695 cm−1 can be detected in N330-1600 and becomes intensive and sharp subsequently. Corresponding to the significantly increased crystallinity from the XRD result, this indicates the arising of strong interlayer interaction between the graphitic layers in the shell region of the nano-polyhedra.29 N330 CB and its thermal treated samples shows the similar FT-IR characteristics (Fig. 3d). Common oxygen-bearing functional groups such as C–O–C, –OH, –CO, and –COOH are not detected. The XPS C1s curve of N330 CB is narrowed after high temperature treatment (Fig. 3e and f), indicating the multiple hybridized states of the carbon atoms (sp2, sp3 C, and defects) in the amorphous N330 CB skeleton are decreased along with the structural transformation to more ordered one.
It should be mentioned that the mass residual of N330 CB even after 2800 °C treatment is more than 97%, demonstrating that formation of hollow polyhedral structure is not due to removal of the inner cores. To deeply understand the structural transformation mechanism, we oxidized N330 CB at 430 °C in air atmosphere. We find that the solid spherical N330 nanoparticles are also transformed to hollow spherical nanoparticles (Fig. 4a and b) with the mass loss of nearly 50%. But this phenomenon is different in principle from the high temperature induced transformation. In accordance with the early study by Donnet et al.,30 the hollow structure is due to etching and removal of the inner cores of N330 CB during air oxidation. The carbon shell still shows a concentric fashion (Fig. 4b). The XRD and Raman patterns given in Fig. 4c and d indicate that AO-N330 still shows a low crystallinity and a high defect density, which is similar as those of N330 CB. The coalescence or reconstruction of small graphene flakes is barely occurred at the relative low temperature of 430 °C. The aforementioned results not only provide a direct evidence for the skin–core structure of CB nanoparticles, but also demonstrate that the graphene flakes of the core regions are more disordered and twisted than those of the skin regions because the cores are more reactive for air oxidation.
Fig. 4 (a) and (b) HRTEM images of the AO-N330, (c) XRD and (d) Raman patterns of N330 CB and AO-N330. |
From the discussion above, the structural transformation mechanism is proposed (model shown in Fig. 1g). First, we should review the formation process of CB. The hydrocarbon precursors undergo decomposition and condensation under high fabrication temperature, resulting in the formation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons as nucleuses (cores). These nucleuses (cores) are of a highly twisted and defective structure, and may stack loosely with each other because of the short liquid-maintaining time at high temperature. Thereafter, pyrolytic deposition takes place on these nucleuses to form a relatively dense and ordered pyrolytic carbon skin. Because of continues aggregation and deposition, CB nanoparticles tend to form as a skin–core structure.3,17–19 When these nanoparticles undergo a high temperature treatment, well ordered graphitic skin is preferentially formed by easy coalescence and reconstruction of the small graphene flakes in the dense and ordered pyrolytic carbon skin.31,32 But large-sized ordered graphitic lamellas are hardly formed in the core region because the graphene flakes show a highly disordered and twisted structure in a confined space. At higher temperature, these twisted graphene flakes are transformed to onion-like carbons, leading to the formation of a multilocular hollow structure.31,32 The proposed mechanism is in well accordance with our experimental results. What's more, from the energy point of view, the small graphene flakes tend to coalesce together with the rising of treating temperature to diminish high energy edges, crystal boundary, and defects. Concentric arranged graphene flakes in the skin region of CB nanoparticles therefore, are easily transformed to multilayer stacked graphitic shells. But because of the steric hindrance effect in a confined space, the highly twisted graphene flakes in the core region are more difficult to rearrange. At higher treating temperature, these highly twisted graphene flakes coalesce and tend to flattened in a confined space to form graphitic carbon onions to further reduce the systematic energy. As a result, the solid spherical CB nanoparticles are transformed to hollow nano-polyhedra through high temperature thermal treatment.
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