Heat-treatment effect on the nanosized graphite π-electron system during diamond to graphite conversion
- 15 October 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 62 (16) , 11209-11218
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.62.11209
Abstract
Graphite nanoparticles were prepared by the heat treatment of diamond nanoparticles in the range 900–1600 °C. X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and Raman scattering studies indicate that the onset temperature of the diamond-graphite transition is around 1200 °C and the complete conversion of diamond to graphite occurs at 1600 °C. Based on the structural characteristics the samples are categorized into -dominated (as-prepared and 900 °C), mixed-phase (1200 and 1400 °C), and -dominated systems (1600 °C). The larger c-axis repeat distances and the high-resolution TEM images for the mixed-phase systems denote the presence of the remnant buckling feature of the diamond (111) planes in the graphene sheets. Magnetic susceptibility and ESR studies suggest the development of itinerant-π-electron system from the 1200 °C and higher-temperature heat-treated samples. The completely graphitized sample reveals the important role of edge-inherited nonbonding π-electron states in the electronic structure. The Raman G-peak position and the orbital diamagnetism show considerable deviation from the bulk-graphite values, which is explained on the basis of charge transfer from the graphite π band to the localized edge states and the resulting shifting of the Fermi level. The enhanced spin-lattice relaxation rates in the case of more graphitized samples heat-treated at 1400 and 1600 °C are expected to arise from the involvement of the localized edge-state electrons. In the less-graphitized 1200 °C heat-treated sample, however, the corrugated nature of the graphene planes is likely to hinder such fast-relaxation processes.
Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- High-pressure phase transitions inFe, and Mn)Physical Review B, 1998
- Diamond-graphite phase transition in ultradisperse-diamond clustersPhysics of the Solid State, 1997
- Raman-scattering and transmission-electron-microscopy studies of fluorine-intercalated graphite fibersF (7.8≥x≥2.9)Physical Review B, 1992
- Electron spin resonance in graphitePhysical Review B, 1991
- Characterization of diamond films by Raman spectroscopyJournal of Materials Research, 1989
- g-factor of current carriers in pyrolytic carbons with quasi-two-dimensional graphite structureCarbon, 1988
- New dimerized-chain model for the reconstruction of the diamond (111)-(2 × 1) surfacePhysical Review B, 1982
- A study of the transformation of diamond to graphiteProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A. Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1964
- Electron Spin Resonance in Complexes of Aromatic Hydrocarbons with IodineThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1961
- The Diamagnetic Sucseptibilities and Anisotropies of the Polynuclear Aromatic CompoundsBulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan, 1953