Unveiling the microstructural evolution of carbon fibers derived from polyamide-6

Cole A. Love-Baker, Timothy M. Harrell, Alexander Scherschel, Zan Gao, Ningning Song, Kenneth R. Brown, Frederic Vautard, Ilia Ivanov, James Klett, Xiaodong Li*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Polyacrylonitrile-based carbon fibers have dominated the industry for decades, but the high cost of polyacrylonitrile has prevented the widespread adoption of carbon fiber in high-volume structural applications. As such, a significant amount of research has been dedicated to finding an alternative, low-cost carbon fiber precursor. In this work, carbon fibers were produced from polyamide-6 using metal salt impregnation and a thermo-oxidative stabilization step. To gain further insight into the carbonization process and microstructural transformation, the morphologies, crystallinities, elemental compositions, and thermal stabilities of the fibers were characterized at various stages of processing. The stabilization step resulted in a significant increase in carbon yield, indicating a dramatic increase in thermal stability. This is due to the crosslinking of polyamide-6 chains, which was confirmed by functional group analysis. The crystallinity of the fibers was also significantly altered during processing, as the produced carbon fibers consisted of pseudo-amorphous carbon with two distinct regions of metal salt impregnation. The findings and microstructural evolution mechanisms provide guidelines for further research into carbon fiber produced from polyamide-6.

Original languageEnglish
Article number72
JournalJournal of Polymer Research
Volume30
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Carbon fiber
  • Carbonization
  • Crystallinity
  • Metal salt
  • Polyamide-6
  • Stabilization

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