The thermal conductivity of ribbon-shaped fibers produced at Clemson Univer
sity and graphitized at 2400 degrees C and of commercial round fibers graph
itized at temperatures above 3000 degrees C were measured by two different
methods. One instrument, located at BP Amoco in Alpharetta, GA, measures a
fiber sample's thermal response to an oscillating heat input. This device w
as used to measure room-temperature thermal conductivity of the fibers. A s
econd apparatus, located at the University of Louvain-la-Neuve in Belgium,
measures a fiber sample's thermal response to a controlled thermal gradient
. This device was used to measure the temperature dependence of the thermal
conductivity of selected fiber sets. The results will be presented and the
accuracy of the two methods compared. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All r
ights reserved.