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Hey member,
Your answer sounds good. I wrote approx. the same thing.
For the first part,
1) In graphite, the carbon atoms are arranged in layers and in hexagonals while in diamond, the arrangement of carbon atoms form a tetrahedral structure.
2) In diamond, one carbon atom is covalently bonded to four other carbon atoms while in graphite, one carbon atom is covalently bonded to three other carbon atoms
For the second part.
In diamond, there are numerous strong covalent bonds in a giant three dimensional structure and that makes diamond very hard. But in graphite, there are weak Van Der Waal's forces of attraction betweeen the layers of atoms and the layers of atoms can easily slide over one another, making graphite soft and slippery.
Hope we got it right!!!
Anyone else got an idea?
Your answer sounds good. I wrote approx. the same thing.
For the first part,
1) In graphite, the carbon atoms are arranged in layers and in hexagonals while in diamond, the arrangement of carbon atoms form a tetrahedral structure.
2) In diamond, one carbon atom is covalently bonded to four other carbon atoms while in graphite, one carbon atom is covalently bonded to three other carbon atoms
For the second part.
In diamond, there are numerous strong covalent bonds in a giant three dimensional structure and that makes diamond very hard. But in graphite, there are weak Van Der Waal's forces of attraction betweeen the layers of atoms and the layers of atoms can easily slide over one another, making graphite soft and slippery.
Hope we got it right!!!
Anyone else got an idea?