1 research outputs found
Conversion of Natural Tannin to Hydrothermal and Graphene-Like Carbons Studied by Wide-Angle X‑ray Scattering
The atomic structure of carbon materials
prepared from natural
tannin by two different techniques, high-temperature pyrolysis and
low-temperature hydrothermal carbonization, was studied by wide-angle
X-ray scattering. The obtained diffraction data were converted to
the real space representation in the form of pair distribution functions.
The X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy measurements provided information
about the chemical state of carbon in tannin-based materials that
was used to construct final structural models of the investigated
samples. The results of the experimental data in both reciprocal and
real spaces were compared with computer simulations based on the PM7
semiempirical quantum chemical method. Using the collected detailed
information, structural models of the tannin-based carbons were proposed.
The characteristics of the investigated materials at the atomic level
were discussed in relation to their preparation method. The rearrangement
of the tannin molecular structure and its transformation to graphene-like
structure was described. The structure of tannin-based carbons pyrolyzed
at 900 °C exhibited coherently scattering domains about 20 Å
in size, consisting of two defected atomic layers and resembling a
graphene-like arrangement