Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
A primary classification of carbons is into crystalline and non-crystalline forms. The only crystalline carbon encountered as a pigment is graphite; a secondary classification for non-crystalline forms is into flame carbons (formed in the gas phase), cokes (formed in a liquid or plastic phase), chars (formed entirely in the solid phase) and natural forms such as coal. The main features, molecular structures and physical and chemical properties of these carbon types, so far as they are relevant to pigment studies, are reviewed in outline. Some better-known pigments based on carbon are summarized, with an indication of which form or forms of carbon each contains. X-ray diffraction patterns for graphites, and for examples of the non-crystalline types, are described and discussed. Particle morphology of various carbons and pigments, as elucidated from scanning electron micrographs, is described in some detail, and notes are added on the use of optical microscopy in studying these materials.
John Winter (Sun,) studied this question.