Effect of the oxygen-induced modification of polyacrylonitrile fibers during thermal-oxidative stabilization on the radial microcrystalline structure of the resulting carbon fibers

Abstract The oxygen-induced modification of polyacrylonitrile (PAN) fibers during the final stage of thermal-oxidative stabilization is used to control the degree of chemical reactions and the radial structural homogeneity of fibers. A radial structure model for oxidized PAN fibers (OFs) and carbon fibers (CFs) has been established by Raman spectroscopy and wide angle X-ray diffraction. According to the model, the cross-section of OFs is divided into the internal and external regions; the oxygen-induced modification has a greater effect on the structural evolution of internal regions than that of external regions. When the oxygen volume content for the modification is 22.2%, the OFs possess the highest level value for degree of disorder ( DD ) in internal regions. This is inherited by the corresponding CFs with the best radial structure homogeneity and optimum mechanical properties; meanwhile, the coefficient of variation for DD is defined to characterize the radial homogeneity of CFs. The mechanism of the oxygen-induced modification demonstrates that the mechanical properties of the resulting CFs depend on the degrees of the intermolecular cyclization and oxidation which are beneficial to the decrease in CF crystallite size.

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