Graphite and diamond are generally regarded as giant covalent lattice structures ( or by similar meaning names e.g. networks) at least they are by UK exam boards. Similarity graphene being a one atom thick version of graphite. C60 is generally regarded as molecular. There are extensive explanations on Wikipedia.
C60 I can see as molecular.
I'm fine with diamond being giant covalent.. or graphene.
but it seems a bit problematic to me for Graphite to be classified as giant covalent
While graphite it seems isn't considered to be molecular , it seems to me that in a sense, graphite is molecular 'cos you have a repeating unit, each sheet of graphene.. Graphite is composed of macromolecules, (each macromolecule being a sheet of graphene)
Giant covalent is meant to be a macromolecule, fine for diamond, you have a (mathematically) "connected network" , there's a path from one atom to any other atom, and all via covalent bonds. But with Graphite you don't have that. It seems really flawed to describe Graphite as a macromolecule.
I understand that methane doesn't contain hydrogen bonds.. If you froze methane, you'd have molecules of CH4 each connected with VDW interactions, you wouldn't have a (mathematically connected network) of covalent bonds. so it wouldn't be a macromolecule, it wouldn't be giant covalent. Likewise H2O hydrogen bonds would exclude something from being a molecule. So Frozen water would not be a macromolecule, it wouldn't be giant covalent. We can't really say Graphite is one big molecule / macromolecule, and hence when drawing with a pencil , it draws.. as we know the sheets of graphene slip around and come off. The sheets aren't bonded to each other.
Thanks