Carbon Allotropes
| Feature |
Diamond |
Graphite |
Graphene |
C₆₀ Fullerene |
| Structure |
3D Network |
Layered |
Single Sheet |
Sphere |
| Bonds per C |
4 |
3 |
3 |
3 |
| Conductivity |
No |
Yes |
Yes (Very High) |
Semi |
| Hardness |
Very Hard |
Soft (Layers slide) |
Very Strong |
Moderate |
Silicon Structures
Silicon (Si)
Tetrahedral lattice structure identical to Diamond. Each Si bonded to 4 others.
Semiconductor — used in microchips.
Silicon Dioxide (SiO₂)
Giant covalent network (Sand/Quartz). Each Si bonded to 4 O, each O bonded to 2 Si. Strong, high MP,
non-conductive.
Why does Graphite Conduct?
Each carbon in Graphite uses only 3 of its 4 valence electrons for bonding. The 4th electron is
delocalized across the entire layer — creating mobile charge carriers (like a metal).
Think About It
Both diamond and SiO₂ are giant covalent structures with high melting points. But diamond is used as
a cutting tool and SiO₂ (sand) is not. Why?
Diamond has each carbon bonded to 4 others in
a uniform 3D tetrahedral lattice — making it the hardest known natural substance.
SiO₂ also has a 3D network, but the Si–O bonds are longer and the lattice arrangement is less
compact, so it is hard but not as hard as diamond. Crucially, diamond's uniform C–C
bonding gives it no weak points.