No.
There are various chemicals that make things rust and a good example is muriatic acid. Rust occurs when iron is oxidized.
Carbon Dioxside
soggy and wet conditions can make metal rust
The term "rust" technically applies only to iron oxides and its variations, so the element carbon cannot rust.
no because of the carbon dioxide, it is impossible to rust
Yes, mild carbon steels are very prone to rust.
rust is oxidized iron basically that means FeO or Iron Oxide. this occurs on steel, as steel is iron and carbon (amongst other things) it is the Iron that oxidizes to make the rust.
You need naked iron, in an environment containing oxygen (like most outside air, or water). Steel is carbon saturated steel. Oxygen can't easily bind with the iron elements in steel, as carbon has a stronger bond, and even if an oxygen atom would pull out another atom out of the steel it would be a carbon atom, not an iron one.
Living things are based on compounds of carbon.
There is nothing good about rust.
carbon,hydrogen,oxygen
No, graphite does not rust because it is a form of carbon and does not contain iron, which is necessary for rust to form. Graphite is a stable material that is not prone to oxidation like iron or steel.