Abstract

A facile means for obtaining submicrometer carbon fibers with a nanoporous structure is presented. A mixture of polyacrylonitrile (PAN) and a copolymer of acrylonitrile and methyl methacrylate (poly(AN-co-MMA)) in dimethylformamide was electrospun into submicrometer fibers with a microphase-separated structure. During the followed oxidation process, the copolymer domains were pyrolyzed, resulting in a nanoporous structure that was preserved after carbonization. The microphase-separated structure of the PAN/poly(AN-co-MMA) electrospun fibers, the morphology, and porous structure of both the oxidized and the carbonized fibers were observed with scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The carbon fibers have diameters ranging from several hundred nanometers to about 1 microm. The nanopores or nanoslits throughout the fiber surface and interior with diameters of several tens of nanometers are interconnected and oriented along the longitudinal axis of the fibers. This unique nanoporous morphology similar to the microphase-separated structure in the PAN/poly(AN-co-MMA) fibers is attributed to the rapid phase separation, solidification, as well as the stretching of the fibers during electrospinning. The pore volume and pore size distribution of the carbonized fibers were investigated by nitrogen adsorption and desorption.

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