Abstract:
The experimental procedure involving pulsed laser heating is realized, which enables one to investigate phase transformations in graphite and eliminates the homogeneous condensation of carbon vapor over a sample. Data are obtained on the melting point of graphite and the temperature of crystallization of liquid carbon at a pressure of $15$ MPa. The absence of a difference between the melting point of graphite at a heating rate of $100$ MK/s and the temperature of crystallization of liquid carbon at the cooling rate of the melt bath of $1.6$ MK/s is revealed, which is indicative of the quasi-equilibrium of the melting process. In view of this, the temperature data are averaged by a unified value of $4800\pm100$ K. It is shown that, during the crystallization of carbon melt, highly ordered graphite with crystallites up to $250\mu$m in size is formed in a liquid film $5\mu$m thick on a graphite substrate.