The conundrum can be explained by noting that within the graphite layers each carbon atom has three neighbors with which it shares its four electrons. In the diamond structure, each carbon atom shares its four electrons with four atoms. This gives the individual graphite layers a different electronic structure and stronger chemical bonding than diamond. The flip side, though, is that each atom in graphite has no electrons left over to form strong bonds between its layers. Instead, these layers are held together by the universal glue of the material world, a weak set of forces generated by
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