There are also rackets with "soft carbon", "3k carbon", "LD carbon", etc. So at the end of the day the mechanical properties of the carbon layer and the glue to the wood layers (and the wood layers themselves) determine the characteristics of the blade. E.g. I have the Yinhe T6s, T7s, T8s, T11 which have carbon (T6s) and arylate carbon (a weave of carbon and kevlar, T7s and T8s), and different wood stacks but always cypress top layer (similar to Hinoki) and external carbon (i.e. carbon under cypress with no intermediate wood layer). The playing characteristics are very different, with the T6s being "harder" and the T7s slower and softer, and the T8s fast but soft relatively speaking. The T8s feels similar to the DHS Fang Bo B2X which has "2 AC , Pith-Film Carbon" whatever that means (also a weave of two strands). It seems to be pretty popular from how many Princett.com has in stock.
I also have the Yinhe 970xxA (Koto + internal ALC) and Pro 01 (Koto + external ALC) and they behave predictably with the Pro 01 being more crispy and the 970xxA being similar to the B2X but a little slower and less dwell (the Koto vs Limba effect).
So at the end of the day I don't think you can generalize ALC vs. ZLC carbon, it depends on not just the carbon material but also many other factors. This is why Sanwei or Yinhe have many combinations of wood and carbon available and I guess they see what sticks. I just bought the Sanwei King Kong 2 for $27 at AliExpress (admittedly, for the cool name) which has LD carbon under Limba and Spruce and is faster than the B2X. Great quality blade but maybe too fast at 1485Hz vs B2X 1442Hz.
Also for the B2X I had to post-process it with varnish & various sand papers to get the sharp edges from the ALC layer taken care of. The Sanwei and Yinhe blades had better quality but I still varnish and sand them.