Graphite - The Layered Wonder
Here's where carbon gets clever - graphite shows how the same element can behave completely differently just by changing its structure. In graphite, each carbon atom only forms three covalent bonds with other carbon atoms, creating flat layers of hexagons that look a bit like chicken wire.
The magic happens between these layers. Whilst the bonds within each layer are incredibly strong (giving graphite a high melting point), there are only weak forces holding the layers together. This means the layers can slide over each other like a deck of cards, making graphite soft and slippery.
This sliding property makes graphite brilliant for things you wouldn't expect - like pencil leads and lubricants. Plus, each carbon atom has one delocalised electron that's free to move around, which means graphite can actually conduct electricity and heat (unlike diamond).
Real-World Connection: The graphite in your pencil works because tiny layers rub off onto the paper when you write!