Synthetic Graphite
Synthetic Graphite is a carbon-based material created primarily from the result of Electrode manufacturing. These electrodes carry the electricity needed to heat the vast majority steel furnaces. They are made when petroleum coke is mixed with petroleum pitch. That mixture is then extruded, shaped, sintered, and heated to above 3000 °C, so the carbon converts to graphite.
Synthetic Graphite is most commonly found in a powder form and scrap metal form. The powder is made by heating powdered pet-coke above the temperature of graphitization.
The graphite scrap metal comes from pieces of unusable electrode material (in the manufacturing stage or after use) and lathe turnings, usually after crushing and sizing.
Most synthetic graphite powder is used for carbon raisers in foundries and steel plants. Synthetic graphite is processed at ultra-high temperatures, and impurities contained in the precursor carbons are significantly reduced during the concentration processing. This occurs as a result of the high temperature vaporization of volatile impurities, which at the process temperatures utilized, includes most metal oxides, sulfur, nitrogen, hydrogen, and all organic components that were part of the original petroleum or coal tar pitch.
Synthetic Graphite is essentially the most chemically pure form of carbon available and is used in many applications. These applications include, but not limited to, friction, foundry, electrical carbons, fuel cell bi-polar plates, coatings, electrolytic processes, corrosion products, conductive fillers, rubber and plastic compounds, and drilling applications.