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Carbon - Graphite Materials

Chemical Formula
C
Topics Covered
Introduction
Types of Carbon
Amorphous Carbon
Graphite
Carbon-Graphites
Processing Carbon-Graphites
Carbon-Graphites vs Traditional Lubricants
Chemically Aggressive Environments
High Load Applications
Design Factors
Carbon-Graphite Seals
Impregnation of Carbon-Graphite Seals
Blistering
Carbon-Graphite Seals in Aerospace Applications
Materials Selection and Suitability
Introduction
Carbon-graphites offer the design engineer a unique family of mechanical materials. Manufactured entirely from
carbon and including high temperature carbonaceous bonding, these materials combine the strength, hardness
and wear resistance of carbon with the corrosion resistance and self lubricating properties of graphite. The
precisely controlled inherent porosity of carbon-graphites can be filled with a variety of impregnants to enhance
chemical, mechanical and tribological properties.
Types of Carbon
The terms carbon and graphite are often used interchangeably. This is unfortunate since each form of the
element carbon offers specific properties that can be used to benefit different types of applications.
Amorphous Carbon
Amorphous carbon is a very hard, strong compound. The crystals exhibit a turbostratic disorder which makes the
material extremely resistant to wear. The strength and wear resistance properties of this material make it of
interest in some applications. However, these strengths can also be a weakness -carbon generates high friction
when rubbed against another surface.
Graphite
Graphite, on the other hand, is softer and relatively weak because of the crystalline order and closer spacing
between the monoplanes and stacks. A graphite structure can be compared to a deck of cards with individual
layers able to easily slide off the deck. This phenomenon gives the material a self lubricating ability which is
matched by no other material. External lubricants are simply not necessary.
Carbon-Graphites
It is possible to combine amorphous carbon and graphite to take full advantage of the strengths and weaknesses
of each of these two types of carbon, table 1. The proper mixture of the two materials is strong and hard and has
low friction. At the same time, this composite has excellent corrosion resistance and is capable of operating at
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temperatures in excess of 315C for extended periods of time, depending on the specific grade. The ability to
create materials that have these properties is the basis of the manufactured mechanical carbon materials that
perform well in difficult tribological situations such as pumps.
Table 1. Properties of typical carbon and graphite materials.
Carbon
100%
Carbon-graphite
(70%-30%)
Carbon-graphite
(30%-70%)
Graphite
100%
Apparent density
(g.cm
-3
)
1.70 1.72 1.75 1.80
Hardness 100 85 65 40
Compressive strength
(MNm
-2
)
300 208 145 55
Flexural strength
(MNm
-2
)
62 62 52 28
Modulus of elasticity
(GNm
-2
)
21 17 14 10
Thermal conductivity
(W/m.C)
5 9 12 85
Temp limit in air (C) 315 315 315 455
Processing Carbon-Graphites
Carbon-graphites are created by combining the two forms of carbon with coal tar pitch. The coal tar pitch acts as
a temporary binder that holds the two structures together during the compression moulding process in which near
net shapes are formed. Following the moulding operation, the parts are sintered at temperatures high enough to
carbonise the coal tar pitch. The result is a structure that is completely carbon bound and contains both carbon
and graphite. This structure is extremely strong in compression and will not creep under load. The carbonisation
of the temporary binder leaves holes in the structure - on a micro scale the sintered body is a black sponge.
The formation of holes during the processing of a carbon-graphite composite has various advantages. The holes
can be filled with resins, metals, carbon, or inorganic salts, depending on the planned use of the material, table 2.
These fillers serve to improve the strength, thermal conductivity and tribological characteristics of the material.
Additionally, carbon-graphite can be sintered to an even higher temperature to convert the entire structure to
graphite to provide especially good performance in very high temperature, high speed applications.
Impregnation Application
Thermoset resin General duty to 260C in water, coolants, fuels, oils.
Light chemical solutions, food and drug.
Antimony Hot water, steam, light hydrocarbons.
Copper or silver High pressure service to 20.7MNm
-2
.
Carbon Highly corrosive environments.
Film formers (fluorides etc) Extremely dry environments, vacuum or cryogenic.
Oxidation inhibitors (phosphates etc) High temperature and/or high speed (to 538C and
240ms
-1
).
Carbon-Graphites vs Traditional Lubricants
Carbon-graphites are used in a wide range of applications where traditional lubricating methods are not
appropriate. For example, a typical oil lubricated bearing struggles at temperatures below -40C because of the
high viscosity of the oil. Above 200C oils carbonise, making them abrasive and ineffective. Graphite bearings are
capable of extended use at temperatures above 600C.
Chemically Aggressive Environments
Chemically aggressive applications represent another application niche for carbon-graphite. For instance,
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sterilisation processes tend to leach the oil from the structure of an oil lubricated bearing. Also, solvents and
radiation can break down lubricating oils, and low pressures can cause the oil to vaporise. Carbon-graphite
materials are inherently stable and chemically resistant, making them ideally suitable for these types of
application, figure 1.
Figure 1. Inside of a pump. The four vanes on the rotor are made of carbon-graphite, and are consequently self
lubricating, temperature resistant and impermeable to gases and liquids.
High Load Applications
Lubricants are inappropriate in other applications for a variety of reasons. High loads can squeeze the lubricant
from a surface. Without the hydrodynamic layer of lubricant, failure is imminent if the material cannot provide self
lubrication. In some applications, such as those involving food handling, lubricants can contaminate the
surrounding environment. Specific grades of carbon-graphites are approved for use in food handling applications.
Design Factors
Carbon-graphite bearings are used in both wet and dry operating conditions. Carbon-graphite allows the designer
to specify the bearing close to the boundary lubricated condition without the risk of seizure. Permissible loads and
running speeds depend on the allowable wear rate. Shaft materials and surface finishes are important factors in
the wear rates of carbon-graphite materials. As a rule of thumb, the harder and more polished the surface, the
lower the wear. Where possible, aluminium and bronze should be avoided for use as shaft materials.
Carbon-graphite materials are also widely used as rotating shaft and face seal materials, figure 2. They perform
well when running against metal and ceramic counterfaces. Seals are manufactured from solid rings, split rings
and segmented rings for use in both liquid and dry-running applications in the aerospace, nuclear, petrochemical
and general marine industries.
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Figure 2. Carbon-graphite seals are self lubricating, resistant to chemical corrosion, and capable of running at
temperatures up to 538C.
Carbon-Graphite Seals
Seal materials require high strength and a relatively high modulus of elasticity to withstand deformation at the
interface. Carbon-graphite seal materials provide the strength and rigidity which are especially important in high
pressure, zero leakage mechanical end-face seals. High thermal conductivity is essential in removing heat from
the interface.
Seal wear is a result of adhesive wear, chemical wear, erosive wear and sometimes radioactive wear.
Carbon-graphite is inert to most chemical reagents so it survives where other materials fail. However, chemical
wear is evidenced in certain strong oxidising environments or where the additives are attacked by specific
oxidising reagents.
Impregnation of Carbon-Graphite Seals
Impregnation of carbon seals can be done with a variety of materials to control permeability. In addition to
thermoset resins, other types of impregnants include thermoplastics, metals, and inorganic salts or glasses. The
temperature limit of the impregnant places an upper limit on the operating temperature of the carbon parts.
Metals such as antimony, silver, copper, nickel, and babbitt can improve the strength, thermal conductivity, and
tribological characteristics of the materials. Impregnants made of inorganic salts usually phosphate or borate -
and glasses are used in high temperature applications. Carbons impregnated with soluble salts must be handled
carefully to avoid exudation, especially under humid conditions, but loss of impregnant rarely affects any physical
property of a seal other than permeability.
Blistering
Blistering is a critical concern with carbon seal materials. Strangely, the reason why blistering occasionally occurs
is not clear. One of the most popular explanations is that a certain amount of fluid becomes absorbed in the
carbon substrate and expands due to frictional heat, creating a subsurface pressure and eventual crater in the
seal face. Another theory is that softer mating materials can tend to tear pieces from the carbon-graphite in the
presence of heavy hydrocarbons. Blistering is most often found in applications involving hydrocarbons or cyclical
temperature service such as air conditioning compressors. In some cases, the use of silicon carbide as a mating
surface will reduce or even eliminate a blistering problem, possibly because of its high thermal conductivity and
hardness.
Carbon-Graphite Seals in Aerospace Applications
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Carbon-graphite and graphites are excellent materials for aircraft turbine engine mainshaft seals. The mainshaft
in a turbine engine rotates at very high speeds and operates in an environment of changing high temperature
conditions. Mainshaft bearing compartment seals are used to protect rotor support bearings from hot gases
flowing through the engine and to prevent the loss of lubricant in the bearing compartments.
Materials Selection and Suitability
Loads, speeds, temperatures, mating materials, cost constraints and projected volume are critical factors to be
kept in mind when selecting materials. Scores of base carbon materials are available with hundreds of
modifications that can be customised for specific designs and environments. General service carbon-graphites are
usable up to 260C while special grades are available that provide resistance up to 538C. Special carbons and
impregnants are used for seal applications in the 260-538C temperature range.
These materials are chemically inert, temperature resistant, lightweight, resilient, dimensionally stable, and
impermeable to gases and liquids. They can be moulded to size or machined to close tolerances, impregnated,
plated, vulcanised to rubber, and cemented or shrunk into housings or retainers - a truly versatile set of
materials.

Primary author: Joe Boylan


Source: Materials World, Vol. 4, no. 12 pp. 707-8, December 1996.

For more information on Materials World please visit The Institute of Materials.

Date Added: May 29, 2001


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