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Topic: Ceraphite


In the News (Wed 3 Dec 08)

  
  Looking for more info on Ceraphite "aka white carbon" tia sal
Greetings All, I Had a little dream about white carbon so I decided to look it up and what I found is that it's called Ceraphite.
The problem is all the websites I've found using google say the same thing "Ceraphite is the fourth allotropic form of carbon, also known as white carbon.
Discovered in 1969, it is one of the softest substances known to man. It is formed as small transparent crystals on the edges of planes of graphite when heated to above ~2550 kelvins at low pressures under free-vaporization conditions.
www.talkaboutscience.com /group/sci.chem.electrochem/messages/14835.html   (227 words)

  
  Republican Durable Materials Manufacturing Facility
Reputation: This establishment is known to produce extremely high quality merctite, a valuable though dense mega-damage resistant metal alloy, as well as good quality ceraphite mega-damage resistant material.
Description of Establishment: This establishment is a large, three story building (approximately 450'x300'), built in the same fashion as the Republican Smelting Plant, with a Merctite frame, covered in specially treated sheet steel.
Ceraphite is a non-metallic type of construction material made extensively with a blend of ceramic and graphite layers creating an ultra strong material.
members.tripod.com /~SirTenzan/RIFTS/republicandurablemat.html   (251 words)

  
 What is an Allotrope?
It possesses allotropes most radically different from one another, ranging from soft to hard, opaque to transparent, abrasive to smooth, inexpensive to costly.
These allotropes include the amorphous carbon allotrope, carbon nanofoam, carbon nanotube, the diamond allotrope, fullerene allotrope, graphite, lonsdaleite, and ceraphite allotrope.
Coal and soot are both both forms of amorphous carbon, one of the most common carbon allotropes.
www.wisegeek.com /what-is-an-allotrope.htm   (404 words)

  
 Diamond - Everything on Diamond (information, latest news, articles,...)
The mineral diamond is a crystalline form, or allotrope, of carbon (other allotropes of carbon include graphite, fullerene and ceraphite).
It is one of the most known and most useful of more than 3,000 known minerals.
Mineral - Crystalline - Allotrope - Carbon - Allotropes of carbon - Graphite - Fullerene - Ceraphite - Hardness - Ancient Greek - Dispersion - Jewelry - Volcanic pipe - Africa
www.spiritus-temporis.com /diamond   (944 words)

  
 Diamond Gemstone Library — Information & Attributes
Diamond is a crystalline form (or allotrope) of carbon, whose hardness and high dispersion of light makes it useful for industrial applications and jewelery.
Other allotropes of carbon include graphite, fullerene and ceraphite but diamonds are specifically renowned as a mineral with superlative physical qualities.
They make excellent abrasives because they can only be scratched by other Diamonds, which also means they hold a polish extremely well and retain luster.
www.eurogem.biz /en/Gemstone-Library/Diamond   (1073 words)

  
 Glossary
The technique can sometimes be used for quantitative analysis of mixtures of materials.
Fullerenes are one of only four types of naturally occurring forms of carbon (the other three are diamond, graphite and ceraphite).
They are molecules composed entirely of carbon and take the form of a hollow sphere, ellipsoid, or tube.
www.yieldengineering.com /default.asp?page=261&KT_az=F   (682 words)

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