Questions tagged [carbon-allotropes]

This tag should be applied to questions about the various allotropes of carbon and their physical or chemical properties. Most important modifications are diamond, graphite, fullerenes, graphene and nanotubes.

One of the main courses of chemistry research in the current decade is devoted to exploring the different allotropes of carbon. Carbon can form a variety of intramolecular bonds with itself, which allows its allotropes to have very special properties.

Most important allotropes are

  • Diamond
    In the bulk material, every carbon atom is covalently bonded to four other carbon atoms, giving it a tetrahedral coordination sphere. It is a very hard material and therefore has many applications in industry and also as jewelry.
    From the IUPAC goldbook:

    An allotropic form of the element carbon with cubic structure (space group $O_{h}^{7} − F d 3 m$) which is thermodynamically stable at pressures above $6~\mathrm{GPa}$ at room temperature and metastable at atmospheric pressure. At low pressures, diamond converts rapidly to graphite at temperatures above $1900~\mathrm{K}$ in an inert atmosphere. The chemical bonding between the carbon atoms is covalent with $\ce{sp^3}$ hybridization.
    Note:
    There is also a hexagonal diamond-like structure of the element carbon (lonsdaleite).

  • Graphite
    Graphite is the most common allotrope of carbon and its thermodynamically stable form at standard temperature and pressure. It is also a good electrical conductor.
    From the IUPAC goldbook:

    An allotropic form of the element carbon consisting of layers of hexagonally arranged carbon atoms in a planar condensed ring system graphene layers The layers are stacked parallel to each other in a three-dimensional crystalline long-range order. There are two allotropic forms with different stacking arrangements, hexagonal and rhombohedral. The chemical bonds within the layers are covalent with $\ce{sp^2}$ hybridization and with a $\ce{C–C}$ distance of $141.7~\mathrm{pm}$. The weak bonds between the layers are metallic with a strength comparable to van der Waals bonding only.
    Note:
    The term graphite is also used often but incorrectly to describe graphite materials, i.e. materials consisting of graphitic carbon made from carbon materials by processing to temperatures greater than $2500~\mathrm{K}$, even though no perfect graphite structure is present.

  • Graphene layer
    A special form of graphite. According to the IUPAC goldbook:

    A single carbon layer of the graphite structure, describing its nature by analogy to a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon of quasi-infinite size.
    Note:
    Previously, descriptions such as graphite layers, carbon layers or carbon sheets have been used for the term graphene. Because graphite designates that modification of the chemical element carbon, in which planar sheets of carbon atoms, each atom bound to three neighbours in a honeycomb-like structure, are stacked in a three-dimensional regular order, it is not correct to use for a single layer a term which includes the term graphite, which would imply a three-dimensional structure. The term graphene should be used only when the reactions, structural relations or other properties of individual layers are discussed.

  • Fullerene
    Also known as buckyballs. All fullerenes are molecules composed entirely of carbon and forming sphere- or cage-like structures of varying size. According to the IUPAC goldbook:

    Compounds composed solely of an even number of carbon atoms, which form a cage-like fused-ring polycyclic system with twelve five-membered rings and the rest six-membered rings. The archetypal example is [60]fullerene, where the atoms and bonds delineate a truncated icosahedron. The term has been broadened to include any closed cage structure consisting entirely of three-coordinate carbon atoms.

  • see Wikipedia for a more complete list of carbon allotropes

This tag should be applied to questions about the any of the allotropes of carbon and their physical or chemical properties.

132 questions
7
votes
1 answer

Molecular differences in the HB graphite hardness scale

Today, I bought some graphite for my pencil. It is rated HB on the HB graphite scale, a measurement of the hardness of graphite. My question is how can there be different hardnesses of the same substance? Is there a difference between 4B graphite…
ringo
  • 24,013
  • 6
  • 87
  • 135
6
votes
2 answers

Aetiology of the word "fullerene" in Chemistry

I am a mathematician and not a chemist, and I am trying to understand the historical relationship and current usage of the word "fullerene" across Mathematics and Chemistry. I apologise in advance if I say chemically-ridiculous things, but I am…
Gordon Royle
  • 163
  • 4
4
votes
1 answer

Why does it require so much pressure to create diamonds?

Why does it require so much energy/pressure to create diamonds, yet with silicon it is very easy and (I believe) naturally occurs in a "diamond" structure, i.e. where each atom is covalently bonded to four adjacent atoms? I guess it has something to…
user1489
  • 49
  • 1
3
votes
3 answers

How to make artificial diamond?

Carbon can be turned to diamond artificially, but while watching a video I learned that a diamond can be made from the ashes of a man, how is this possible?
2
votes
0 answers

Existence of tesserane and it's properties

Could there exist an allotrope of carbon, $\ce{C16}$ where the overall shape of the molecule is a three dimensional representation of a tesseract? And what are its (predicted if unknown/unsynthesised) properties if it does? I imagine this molecule…
tox123
  • 947
  • 6
  • 24
2
votes
2 answers

Why elemental carbon is solid?

Carbon with 6 protons, the first of its group, is a solid, while the very next elements, nitrogen and oxygen, are gaseous in their elemental form. Why carbon is a solid? If it's not the molar mass that defines carbon phase (carbon's molar mass is…
masacatior
  • 51
  • 1
  • 4
1
vote
0 answers

Gas-Phase Functionalization of Carbon Nanotubes

I'm new to the subject of carbon nanotubes; However, I recently studied a little about them. But I failed to understand the gas phase functionalization. As I understand, this technique is used to improve the solubility of the nanotubes. However, I…
1
vote
0 answers

Name for long chain of double-bonded carbon atoms

Long ago (over 10 years), I read an article in my father's copy of Chemistry World on a substance consisting of many carbon atoms in a chain double bonded to each other: $$\ldots\ce{=C=C=C=C=C=}\ldots$$ So, no other elements; a very exotic allotrope…
badjohn
  • 828
  • 1
  • 7
  • 18
0
votes
1 answer

How fast does the diamond lose the atoms at sunlight?

recently I've read that the diamonds lose their atoms at sunlight on the surface. Would you be able to explain me how fast is the rate of this process? Does the diamond lose the atoms each time when is exposured at sunlgiht? Thank you. :)
patricoo
  • 133
  • 1
  • 5
-2
votes
2 answers

Why does Graphene have a higher melting point than Diamond?

I'm not 100% sure about this, so I just wanted to double-check. I think it has something to do with each carbon atom in Graphene having a delocalized electron and this creates carbon ions that can exert an electrostatic attraction. This would…
Tom Brooks
  • 167
  • 2
  • 6
  • 13