No. Graphite is a solid, not a gas and is safe enough for everyday use in pencils.
carbon and graphite are one in the same, graphite is a form of carbon a use for graphite is the lead in your pencil (it's not actually lead, it's graphite) and it is also a good lubricant ;)
Graphite is dark grey. Look at a pencil. Yes, because pencils use graphite, not lead. Though dark and very grey, I would say the hue of graphite is bluer than other shades of dark grey.
If put under enough pressure it will turn into diamond. Pencil-lead is graphite these days, and some companies grind it into a powder for use as a lubricant.
Graphite is not rare as we know it. Graphite is an allotrope of the element carbon, and carbon is relatively abundant in the earth's crust. You can read more here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphite
Bells are cast at the foundry down the road.
Tobbing foundry, production foundry, captive foundry, independent foundry...
"Foundry" is to be used as a noun. The plural is "foundries". We are to rendezvous with our contact tomorrow at oh-six-hundred hours beneath the pecan orchard on the south side of the foundry. I had my home's exterior hardware custom-forged at that foundry. I will be carting an especially heavy load of firewood to the foundry this afternoon.
Kenneth E. Rose has written: 'Silica sand from south-central Kansas for foundry use' -- subject(s): Foundry Sand, Sand, Foundry
can you use graphite black in tyre industry
we use graphite by ever time we use a pencil thats one way we use graphite. Graphite is also used in the making of sports equipment and other every day items since graphite is a lighter material to work with. Like a badminton racquet can be made from graphite to make it lighter.
carbon and graphite are one in the same, graphite is a form of carbon a use for graphite is the lead in your pencil (it's not actually lead, it's graphite) and it is also a good lubricant ;)
Mechanical pencils, like the regular kind of pencils, use graphite.
Graphite is used as a lubricant and, mixed with clay, in pencil lead.
manufacturer of mechanized caning machines in early 1900's located in Elgin, Illinois Extensive machine shop & a wood pattern shop for foundry purposes.
The plural form of foundry is foundries.
Foundry workers