Microscopic insight into the bilateral formation of carbon spirals from a symmetric iron core

Abstract

Mirrored carbon-spirals have been produced from pressured ferrocene via the bilateral extrusion of the spiral pairs from an iron core. A parametric plot of the surface geometry displays the fractal growth of the conical helix made with the logarithmic spiral. Electron microscopy studies show the core is a crystalline cementite which grows and transforms its shape from spherical to biconical as it extrudes two spiralling carbon arms. In a cross section along the arms we observe graphitic flakes arranged in a herringbone structure, normal to which defects propagate. Local-wave-pattern analysis reveals nanoscale defect patterns of two-fold symmetry around the core. The data suggest that the bilateral growth originates from a globular cementite crystal with molten surfaces and the nano-defects shape emerging hexagonal carbon into a fractal structure. Understanding and knowledge obtained provide a basis for the controlled production of advanced carbon materials with designed geometries.

Description
Keywords
Applied physics, Nanoparticles, Nanowires, Synthesis and processing
Citation
Shiozawa, H., Bachmatiuk, A., Stangl, A., Cox, D. C., Silva, S. R. P., Rümmeli, M., & Pichler, T. (2013). Microscopic insight into the bilateral formation of carbon spirals from a symmetric iron core. 3. https://doi.org//10.1038/srep01840
License
CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 Unported