钻石
碳纤维
石墨
石墨烯
材料科学
纳米复合材料
陨石
纳米技术
菱形
拉曼光谱
复合材料
复合数
金刚石材料性能
天体生物学
物理
光学
作者
Péter Németh,Hector J. Lancaster,Christoph G. Salzmann,Kit McColl,Zsolt Fogarassy,Laurence A. J. Garvie,Levente Illés,Béla Pécz,Mara Murri,Furio Corà,Rachael L. Smith,Mohamed Mezouar,Christopher A. Howard,Paul F. McMillan
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2203672119
摘要
Studies of dense carbon materials formed by bolide impacts or produced by laboratory compression provide key information on the high-pressure behavior of carbon and for identifying and designing unique structures for technological applications. However, a major obstacle to studying and designing these materials is an incomplete understanding of their fundamental structures. Here, we report the remarkable structural diversity of cubic/hexagonally ( c / h ) stacked diamond and their association with diamond-graphite nanocomposites containing sp 3 -/sp 2 -bonding patterns, i.e., diaphites, from hard carbon materials formed by shock impact of graphite in the Canyon Diablo iron meteorite. We show evidence for a range of intergrowth types and nanostructures containing unusually short (0.31 nm) graphene spacings and demonstrate that previously neglected or misinterpreted Raman bands can be associated with diaphite structures. Our study provides a structural understanding of the material known as lonsdaleite, previously described as hexagonal diamond, and extends this understanding to other natural and synthetic ultrahard carbon phases. The unique three-dimensional carbon architectures encountered in shock-formed samples can place constraints on the pressure–temperature conditions experienced during an impact and provide exceptional opportunities to engineer the properties of carbon nanocomposite materials and phase assemblages.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI