posted on 2023-05-11, 16:46authored byHarrison Chaney, Kathy Lu
Polymer-derived
ceramics are a promising class of high-temperature
materials. This work uses LAMMPS and reactive force field (ReaxFF)
energy potential to first-time quantify the atomic evolution of the
polymer-to-ceramic conversion. Three different polymer structures
are selected based on initial carbon content and molecular structure
differences. From these simulations, the ceramic composition, yield,
atomic structure, bond change, and radial distribution function (RDF)
are comprehensively analyzed and provided data that are not available
otherwise. The ceramic compositions correlate with the polymer compositions.
The C-rich precursor forms C–C bonds through Si–O, Si–C,
and C–H bond losses while less C-rich polymers have no significant
C–C bond formation during C–H bond loss. The end structures
have vastly different Si–O-rich and C-rich domain sizes, which
cannot be observed by any bulk analysis. For the first time, H presence
and cluster separation are shown to be determined by the polymer molecular
structure. The RDF results show that higher pyrolysis temperature
leads to more C–C bond formation. Even at 2100 K, C–H
bonds are still prevalent and there is no long-range ordering. Such
fundamental understanding provides new knowledge about polymer atomic
evolution to silicon oxycarbide (SiOC) ceramics.