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There are mines of elemental carbon such as graphite. It is the most stable form of elemental carbon at 25°C, under 1 atm (Section 3.7). A second form of pure or nearly pure elemental carbon is represented by diamonds (Section 3.12). Other forms of elemental carbon are produced by combustion or heat treatment of wood (Section 3.6), bio-polymers such as paper, cotton (cellulose), or synthetic polymers such as viscose (Section 11.10.1) and polyacrylonitrile (Section 8.2.7). Nanoparticles such as graphene (Section 3.7), fullerenes (Section 3.8), nanotubes (Section 3.9), and quantum dots of carbon (Section 3.10) are available that find biomedical applications and are used in the manufacture of nanometric objects useful for electronics, optoelectronics, photophysics, energy and the environment protection. Nanoparticles must be handled with care as they can be toxic…