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GRAPHITE

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 365 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GRAPHITE  , a

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mineral
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species consisting of the element carbon crystallized in the
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rhombohedral
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system . Chemically, it is thus indentical with the cubic mineral
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diamond, but between the two there are very wide differences in
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physical characters, Graphite is black and opaque, whilst diamond is colourless and transparent; it is one of the softest (H= I) of minerals, and diamond the hardest of all; it is a good conductor of
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electricity, whilst diamond is a
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bad conductor . The specific gravity is 2.2, that of diamond is 3.5 . Further, unlike diamond, it never occurs as distinctly
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developed crystals, but only as imperfect six-sided plates and scales . There is a perfect cleavage parallel to the
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surface of the scales, and the cleavage flakes are flexible but not elastic . The material is greasy to the touch, and soils everything with which it comes into contact . The lustre is bright and metallic . In its
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external characters graphite is thus strikingly similar to
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molybdenite (q.v.) . The name graphite, given by A . G . Werner in 1789, is from the Greek 'ypatbew, " to write," because the mineral is used for making pencils . Earlier names, still in
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common use, are plumbago and black-lead, but since the mineral contains no lead these names are singularly inappropriate .

Plumbago (

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Lat. plumbum, lead) was originally used for an artificial product obtained from lead ore, and afterwards for the ore (
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galena) itself; it was
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con-fused both with graphite and with molybdenite . The true chemical nature of graphite was determined by K . W . Scheele in 1779 . Graphite occurs mainly in the older crystalline rocks—gneiss, granulite, schist and crystalline limestone—and also sometimes in granite: it is found as isolated scales embedded in these rocks, or as large irregular masses or filling
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veins . It has also been observed as a product of contact-metamorphism in carbonaceous clay-slates near their contact with granite, and where igneous rocks have been intruded into beds of
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coal; in these cases the mineral has clearly been derived from organic
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matter . The graphite found in granite and in veins in
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gneiss, as well as that contained in meteoric irons, cannot have had such an origin . As an artificial product, graphite is well known as dark lustrous scales in grey pig-iron, and in the " kish " of iron furnaces: it is also produced artificially on a large scale, together with
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carborundum, in the electric
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furnace (see below) . The graphite veins in the older crystalline rocks are probably akin to metalliferous veins and the material derived from deep-seated
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sources; the decomposition of metallic carbides by
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water and the reduction of
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hydrocarbon vapours have been suggested as possible modes of origin . Such veins often attain a thickness of several feet, and sometimes possess a columnar structure perpendicular to the enclosing walls; they are met with in the crystalline limestones and other Laurentian rocks of New York and
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Canada, in the gneisses of the
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Austrian
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Alps and the granulites of
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Ceylon . Other localities which have yielded the mineral in large amount are the Alibert mine in
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Irkutsk,
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Siberia and the Borrowdale mine in Cumberland, The
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Santa Maria mines of Sonora, Mexico, probably the richest deposits in the
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world, supply the
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American lead pencil manufacturers . The graphite of New York, Pennsylvania and
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Alabama is " flake " and unsuitable for this purpose .

Graphite is used for the manufacture of pencils, dry

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lubricants, grate
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polish, paints, crucibles and for foundry facings . The material as
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mined usually does not contain more than 20 to 50% of graphite: the ore has therefore to be crushed and the graphite floated off in water from the heavier impurities . Even the purest forms contain a small percentage of volatile matter and ash . The Cumberland graphite, which is especially suitable for pencils, contains about 12 % of impurities . (L . J . S.) Artificial Manufacture.—The alteration of carbon at high temperatures into a material resembling graphite has long been known . In 1893 Girard and Street patented a furnace and a
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process by which this transformation could be effected . Carbon powder compressed into a rod was slowly passed through a tube in which it was subjected to the
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action of one or more electric arcs . E . G . Acheson, in 1896, patented an application of his carborundum process to graphite manufacture, and in 1899 the International Acheson Graphite Co. was formed, employing electric current from the Niagara Falls .

Two procedures are adopted: (I) graphitization of moulded carbons; (2) graphitization of

anthracite en masse . The former includes electrodes, lamp carbons, &c . Coke, or some other form of amorphous carbon, is mixed with a little
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tar, and the required article moulded in a press or by a die . The articles are stacked transversely in a furnace, each being packed in granular coke and covered with carborundum . At first the current is 3000 amperes at 220 volts, increasing to 9000 amperes at 20 volts after 20 hours . In graphitizing en masse large lumps of anthracite are treated in the electric furnace . A soft, unctuous form results on treating carbon with ash or
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silica in
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special furnaces, and this gives the so-called " deflocculated " variety when treated with gallotannic acid . These two modifications are valuable lubricants . The massive graphite is very easily machined and is widely used for electrodes, dynamo brushes, lead pencils and the like . See " Graphite and its Uses," Bull . Imperial Institute, (1906) p . 353, (1907) p .

70; F . Cirkel, Graphite (

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Ottawa, 1907) . (W . G .

End of Article: GRAPHITE
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