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Properties of materials - OCR GatewayFullerenes

Carbon atoms can form four covalent bonds. This is why they can form many different organic substances, such as diamond, graphite and fullerenes. Different substances have different bulk properties.

Part of Chemistry (Single Science)Elements, compounds and mixtures

Fullerenes

Graphene

Graphene is another form of the carbon. Its structure resembles a single layer of . Graphene has a very high and is very strong because of its large regular arrangement of carbon joined by . Like graphite, graphene electricity well because it has that are free to move through its structure.

Dr Mark Miodownik talks to Professor Andre Geim at the University of Manchester about his work on graphene

Fullerenes

Fullerenes are forms of carbon, and include and .

Nanotubes

A nanotube resembles a layer of graphene, rolled into a tube shape. Nanotubes have high , so they are strong in and resist being stretched. Like graphene, nanotubes are strong, and they conduct electricity because they have delocalised electrons.

Covalent structure of a nanotube
Figure caption,
Nanotubes can be several millimetres long but only a few nanometres wide

Buckyballs

Buckyballs are spheres or squashed spheres of carbon atoms. They are made up of large molecules but do not have a giant covalent structure. Weak exist between individual buckyballs. Little is needed to overcome these forces, so substances consisting of buckyballs are slippery and have lower than graphite or .

Covalent structure of buckminsterfullerene
Figure caption,
Buckminsterfullerene, C60, has sixty carbon atoms joined by covalent bonds