Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7850323 | Carbon | 2016 | 24 Pages |
Abstract
A new hydrocarbon - hydrographite - with the composition close to CH is shown to form from graphite and gaseous hydrogen at pressures above 2 GPa and temperatures from 450 to 700 °C. Hydrographite is a black solid thermally stable under ambient conditions. If heated in vacuum, it decomposes into graphite and molecular hydrogen at temperatures from 500 to 650 °C. Powder X-ray diffraction characterizes hydrographite as a multilayer “graphane II” phase predicted by ab initio calculations [Wen X-D et al. PNAS 2011; 108:6833] and consisting of graphane sheets in the chair conformation stacked along the hexagonal c axis in the âABABâ sequence. The crystal structure of the synthesized phase belongs to the P63mc space group. The unit cell parameters are a = 2.53(1) Ã
and c = 9.54(1) Ã
and therefore exceed the corresponding parameters of graphite by 2.4(2)% and 42.0(3)%. Stretching vibrations of C-H groups on the surface of the hydrographite particles are examined by infrared spectroscopy.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Energy (General)
Authors
V.E. Antonov, I.O. Bashkin, A.V. Bazhenov, B.M. Bulychev, V.K. Fedotov, T.N. Fursova, A.I. Kolesnikov, V.I. Kulakov, R.V. Lukashev, D.V. Matveev, M.K. Sakharov, Y.M. Shulga,