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Image of Graphite molecule
Graphite is an allotrope of carbon consisting of stacks of flat sheets of hexagonally arranged carbon atoms (the individual sheets are called graphene). These graphene sheets can slide over one another, making graphite a good lubricant. Graphite is an electrical conductor because electrons easily travel along the planes of the sheets. It forms the lead in pencils (graphite is named after graphic, graphein, to write).
Illustration ID: GRAPHITE-2
Russell Kightley
Illustration size: 16.8 Mpixels (48 MB uncompressed) - 4096x4096 pixels (13.7x13.7 in / 34.7x34.7 cm at 300 ppi)
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https://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/1aea9660-fa89-11e2-9909-010c61a414ed/GRAPHENE-2_xlarge.jpghttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/carbon/-/medias/1aea9660-fa89-11e2-9909-010c61a414ed/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/carbon/-/medias/1aea9660-fa89-11e2-9909-010c61a414ed/price