Concept: Materials can be classified based on their ability to conduct electricity.
Conductors: Materials that allow electric current (flow of charge, usually electrons) to pass through them easily. They have many free charge carriers. Metals are good conductors.
Insulators (or Dielectrics): Materials that resist the flow of electric current. They have very few free charge carriers.
Semiconductors: Materials with electrical conductivity between that of a conductor and an insulator. Their conductivity can be controlled by adding impurities (doping) or by changing temperature or light exposure.
Step 1: Analyzing the electrical properties of the given options
(1) Graphite: Graphite is an allotrope of carbon. In its structure, each carbon atom is bonded to three other carbon atoms, forming layers of hexagonal rings. Each carbon atom has one delocalized valence electron that is free to move throughout the layers. Due to these delocalized electrons, graphite is a good electrical conductor.
(2) Silicon (Si): Silicon is a metalloid and a classic example of a semiconductor. Its conductivity is much lower than metals but higher than insulators, and it's the basis for most modern electronics.
(3) Diamond: Diamond is another allotrope of carbon. In its structure, each carbon atom is covalently bonded to four other carbon atoms in a strong tetrahedral lattice. All four valence electrons of each carbon atom are involved in these strong covalent bonds and are localized. There are no free delocalized electrons available to carry current under normal conditions. Therefore, diamond is an excellent electrical insulator (though it's a very good thermal conductor).
(4) Aluminium (Al): Aluminium is a metal. Metals have a "sea" of delocalized electrons that are free to move, making them very good electrical conductors.
Step 2: Identifying the insulator
Based on the analysis:
Graphite: Conductor
Silicon: Semiconductor
Diamond: Insulator
Aluminium: Conductor
Therefore, Diamond is an electrical insulator among the given options.