Abstract
There are two extreme types of activated
carbon and carbon black although structures intermediate between these two
extremes are more usual. This work has established that in one extreme, the
oxidized form (" H " carbon), the carbon has a pronounced quinonoid
structure which creates a number of fixed olefinic bonds. In the other, the
reduced form (" L " carbon), the structure is more aromatic and has the
characteristics of a hydroquinone. Carbons having properties intermediate
between those of a pure " H " or " L " carbon acquire some
semiquinone characteristics and become less diamagnetic. It is experimentally
shown that the chemical behaviour of these carbons parallels in many ways that
of simple quinone-hydroquinone compounds. The quinonoid structure of an "
H " carbon accounts for the formation of peroxygen complexes, its ability
to catalyse the ionization of oxygen in the presence of an electron donor, its
oxidizing properties, and its reactivity with rubber. The hydroquinone character
of an " L " carbon is responsible for its ability to adsorb alkali,
its reducing properties, and its ability to fog a photographic plate ("
Russell effect "). The change in properties which occurs in chars
carbonized above 650" C is due to the transition from an " L " to
an " H " carbon.
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