We studythe effect of shear deformation on graphitic -CN under pressures of up to 80 GPa at room temperature. -CN samples are transformed from initial amorphous flakes into onion-like structures, in which the nitrogen content in the quenched samples decreases with increasing pressure (from 42% in the initial conditions to 1% at 80 GPa). The concentration of the bonds also decreases from 1 (the initial sample) to 0.62 with increasing pressure to 80 GPa. This transformation of the sample is due to the fact that in the pressure range of 55-115 GPa, the equilibrium phase is not a diamond, but instead, carbon onions cross-linked by bonds, which are denser than diamonds. The results of our study show that the presence of nitrogen in -bonded structures at pressures of higher than 55 GPa reduces the density and, accordingly, carbon structures without nitrogen become thermodynamically favorable.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8063801 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano11040828 | DOI Listing |
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