Abstract

Vapor-grown carbon fibers (VGCFs), platelet graphite nanofibers (PGNFs), turbostratic carbon nanofibers (CNFs), and carbon spheres were continuously produced by the thermal decomposition of ethanol in the presence of an Fe catalyst and a sulfur promoter at 1100 degrees C under a nitrogen/hydrogen atmosphere in a vertical chemical vapor deposition reactor. The sulfur concentration dramatically affected the morphology and microstructure of the carbon materials produced. A large amount of sulfur in the catalytic precursor led to the direct pyrolysis of hydrocarbons and the formation of carbon spheres (Fe:S = 1:10) while a lower amount of sulfur led to the formation of fibrous carbon materials, including VGCFs (Fe:S = 1:0.2), PGNFs (Fe:S = 1:2), and turbostratic CNFs (Fe:S = 1:5). The degree of poisoning of the catalysts determined the precipitation of the graphene layers, allowing the different types of carbon material to form.

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