Liquid Crystals and Carbon Materials

Carbon atoms can be found in a variety of structures, including the tetrahedra of diamond, the stacked planes of graphite, and the celebrated fullerene spheres and nanotubes. The graphite family alone includes a rich variety of materials, ranging from pencil “lead” to interstellar dust to chimney so...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physics today 2000-03, Vol.53 (3), p.39-44
Hauptverfasser: Hurt, Robert H., Chen, Zhong-Ying
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Chen, Zhong-Ying
description Carbon atoms can be found in a variety of structures, including the tetrahedra of diamond, the stacked planes of graphite, and the celebrated fullerene spheres and nanotubes. The graphite family alone includes a rich variety of materials, ranging from pencil “lead” to interstellar dust to chimney soot, and from metallurgical coke to activated charcoal for water filtration to lightweight composites for aerospace components—such as the nose cone of the space shuttle, for which carbon composites were chosen because of their high strength at elevated temperatures.
doi_str_mv 10.1063/1.883020
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subjects Carbon
CARBON COMPOUNDS
CARBON FIBERS
CHEMICAL INDUSTRY
CHEMICAL PROPERTIES
Crystals
HEATING
LIQUID CRYSTALS
MATERIALS SCIENCE
Physics
TEMPERATURE DEPENDENCE
USES
title Liquid Crystals and Carbon Materials
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