Biology, asked by krishnaekjibon9354, 1 year ago

An amorphous allotrope of carbon which floats on water

Answers

Answered by sonabrainly
4

The only way that charcoal (whether of wood, animal, etc.) can float on water is if the total mass of the charcoal is less than the total mass of an equivalent volume of water.

Answered by Arslankincsem
3

The main way that charcoal (regardless of whether of wood, creature, and so on.) can coast on water is if the absolute mass of the charcoal is not exactly the all out mass of an identical volume of water.

Precious stone and graphite are two allotropes of carbon: unadulterated types of a similar component that contrast in structure.

The arrangement of carbon allotropes traverses a bewildering scope of boundaries, taking into account that they are for the most part simply basic developments of a similar component.

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