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granular carbon

The term granular carbon is equivalent to coarse particulate carbon. This is a carbon material consisting of separate particles or grains which are monolithic, on the average larger than about 100 µm in diameter, but smaller than about 1 cm.
Note:
Although limits of size cannot be exactly defined, coke grains obtained by grinding belong to coarse particulate carbon for grain sizes above ca.100 µm, or to fine particulate carbon for grain sizes below ca.100 µm. Colloidalgraphite obtained by grinding of natural graphite is a typical extra fine particulate carbon. Industrial carbon materials (such as electrodes) are made with fillers composed of coarse particulate carbon (coke grains) and fine particulate carbon (flour), and sometimes even colloidal carbon, carbon blacks or soot). They are therefore polygranular materials.
Source:
PAC, 1995, 67, 473 (Recommended terminology for the description of carbon as a solid (IUPAC Recommendations 1995)) on page 491
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IUPAC. Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book"). Compiled by A. D. McNaught and A. Wilkinson. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford (1997). XML on-line corrected version: http://goldbook.iupac.org (2006-) created by M. Nic, J. Jirat, B. Kosata; updates compiled by A. Jenkins. ISBN 0-9678550-9-8. https://doi.org/10.1351/goldbook.
Last update: 2014-02-24; version: 2.3.3.
DOI of this term: https://doi.org/10.1351/goldbook.G02682.
Original PDF version: http://www.iupac.org/goldbook/G02682.pdf. The PDF version is out of date and is provided for reference purposes only. For some entries, the PDF version may be unavailable.
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