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Expanded Graphite — Thermally expandable carbon for conductive and fire-resistant systems
Layered graphite material that expands under heat to form low-density, conductive, and thermally resistant structures
Introduction

Short answer: Expanded graphite is a carbon material produced from graphite that expands when exposed to heat, forming a low-density, layered structure. It is used where thermal response, electrical conductivity, or physical barrier formation is required in solid systems. Its function depends on heat activation and physical expansion, and it does not behave as a molecular flame retardant or chemical additive.

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Material Identity

  • Chemical name: Expanded graphite
  • Base composition: Carbon (C)
  • CAS number: 7782-42-5 (graphite, base material)
  • Physical form: expandable or expanded particulate, flake, or worm-like structure
  • What it is not: not a polymer, not a chemical intumescent, not a nanoscale graphene material

Activation & Trigger Conditions

  • Trigger: thermal energy exposure
  • Energy domain: heat-driven physical expansion and exfoliation
  • Absent trigger: no expansion or barrier formation at low temperatures
  • Insufficient condition: partial heating leads to incomplete expansion and weak barrier effect
  • Excess condition: excessive heat can collapse structure or oxidize carbon in air

Functional Role

  • Forms an expanded physical barrier under heat
  • Provides electrically conductive pathways through carbon networks
  • Reduces heat and mass transfer by volume expansion
  • Contributes to char stability through structural reinforcement

Application Windows

  • Compatible systems: polymers, elastomers, coatings, sealing materials, molded solids
  • Loading range: formulation-dependent; no universal loading applies
  • Processing notes: particle integrity and dispersion affect expansion efficiency and conductivity

Limitations & Failure Modes

  • Poor dispersion → uneven expansion → localized barrier failure
  • Low activation temperature mismatch → delayed expansion → reduced protective effect
  • Oxidative environment at high temperature → carbon degradation → loss of structure

Alternatives & Trade-offs

  • Chemical intumescents: rely on chemical reactions rather than physical expansion
  • Carbon black: provides conductivity without volumetric expansion
  • Graphene-based materials: offer high conductivity but lack macroscopic expansion behavior

When to Use

  • When heat-triggered physical expansion is required
  • When a conductive, carbon-based solid additive is acceptable
  • When barrier formation relies on volume growth rather than chemistry
  • When processing allows retention of particle structure

FAQ

Is expanded graphite chemically reactive in formulations?

No. Its primary function is physical expansion and carbon network formation rather than chemical reaction.

Does expanded graphite behave like graphene?

No. Expanded graphite is a bulk, layered material and does not exhibit nanoscale graphene behavior.

Why does performance vary between grades?

Expansion ratio, particle size, and residual intercalants vary by grade and processing route.

Data

No generic numerical values are listed. Expansion ratio, particle size, conductivity, and ash content are grade-specific and should be taken from supplier COA or test data.

Sources

General literature on expandable graphite and supplier technical documentation where available.

Application area
  • Fire-resistant and heat-responsive polymer systems
  • Conductive composites and molded solids
  • Sealing, gasketing, and barrier materials
  • Thermal management and insulation structures