Title: Carbon Fullerenes
1Carbon Fullerenes
2Formation
- Basic model
- Clustering
- Chains, rings, tangled poly-cyclic structures or
graphite sheets - Annealing (no collisions)
- Random cage, open cage, closed cage structures
- Elimination of dangling bonds
- Fullerenes
- Stone-Wales transformation
- Migration of pentagons
- Rearrangement to lower energy
- Critical parameters
- Annealing time
- Annealing temperature
- 10-1 ms 1000-1500 K for the laser method
- 100 s 1000 K for the arc discharge method
3Formation
- Picture models
- Pentagon road (1)
- Addition of dimers and trimers leaving pentagons
as a deffect - Reduction of dangling bonds, adjacent pentagons
too much stress - Ring pentagon road (2)
- Stacking of proper size of C rings
- Pentagon annealing
- Fullerene road (3)
- Linear chains up to C10
- Rings C10 to C20, fullerene from C30,
- Addition of C2 at two neighboring p-s
- Ring annealing (4)
- Big rings, bi/tri-cyclic structures (C60) anneal
under high T conditions - Chain annealing (5)
- Long chain with spiral structure
- Graphite road (6)
- C10 clusters, graphite sheet, curling
- Nanotube road (7)
- Chips of carbon nanotubes
1
4Formation
- Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations
- Many-body potential function
- Kinetic energy of clusters
- Classical mechanics
- translation, vibration and rotation
- Clustering
- Collisions of atoms or clusters grow and
fragmentation of cluster - Cooling collisions with buffer gas and radiation
- Annealing between collisions
T 3000 K
5Formation
- Temperature dependence of cluster structures
- Collision-free annealing of C60
- Stone-Wales transformation
6Formation
- Fullerene-like cage structures 2500ltTlt3500
- Extrapolation roughly agrees with experimental
conditions
7Formation
C24 flat cluster, 0 s
- Model of charges at bonds
- Molecules classical dynamics
- Electrons quantum mechanics
- Ground and excited states
- Interaction potentials
- Covalent bonds, rotation, torsional vibration
- Interaction between atoms and electrons
- bonding electron pairs at the centers of the
covalent bonds - unshared electrons at approximately the same
distance from the carbon atoms - Classical equations of motion for both
- Folding of flat carbon clusters
- Unshared e rearrange and form symmetrical sphere
layer outside the fullerene
Semispheroid, 50 ps
Fullerene, 150 ps
8Formation
- Another QM and MD simulation
- Density functional theory
- Ring fusion spiral zipper mechanism
- C atoms combine to C2 and C3
- nlt10 linear chain Cn
- sp hybrid prefer linear geometry
- 10ltnlt30 ring
- Energy gain in killing dangling bonds
overcompensates for strain energy caused by
folding - ngt30 ring structure can grow in fullerene
9Synthesis
- Graphite vaporization or ablation
- Laser
- Resistive heating
- AC or DC arc
- Pyrolysis of hydrocarbons
- Flame combustion
- Laser
- Torch or tube furnace
- Ion implantation
- Temperature of condensation and annealing
- 10001500 K
- C60 30/gram
The first published mass spectrum of carbon
clusters in a supersonic beam produced by laser
vaporization of a carbon target in a pulsed
supersonic nozzle operating with a helium carrier
gas.
10Synthesis
Fullerenes are made wherever carbon condenses. It
just took us a little while to find out. Smalley
- Laser vaporization of graphite
- laser-vaporization supersonic cluster beam
technique (Rice Univ., Texas) - 1985 H. W. Kroto (Sussex Univ., Brighton) R.
E. Smalley (Rice) - Experiment
- NdYAG
- 300 mJ, 535 nm, 5ns
- Rotating graphite disk
- Plasma of vaporized carbon atoms
- 10 000 K
- High-density helium pulse
- Condensation and transport
- Integration cup
- Adjusts the time of clustering
- Supersonic expansion
- Frizzing out the reactions
- Ionization by excimer laser
- Mass spectrometer
11Synthesis
- Laser evaporation of doped carbon
12Synthesis
- Resistive heating of graphite
- Carbon rod in 100 torr helium
- Kratschmer-Huffman 1990
- First macroscopic quantities of C60
- Carbon arc
- AC or DC arc in 100 torr helium
- 60 Hz, 100200 A, 1020 V rms
- Continuous graphite rod feedeing
The generator design based on the
Kratschmer-Huffman apparatus.
13Synthesis
- Pyrolysis of hydrocarbons
- Benzene, acetylene, toluene
- Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons PAH
- Naphtalene
- Mechanism
- Removal of hydrogen
- Curling of joined rings
- Optimum conditions
- Very low pressure and high temperature
- Examples
- Combustion of benzene
- Premixed flame of benzene and oxygen with argon
- 20 torr, C/O 0.995, 10 Ar, 1800 K
- Acetylene/oxygen/argon flame
- Adding Cl2 increases fullerene yield
- Torch heating of naphtalene
- Heating torch
- Pyrolysing torch propane/oxygen 1000 ºC
- Laser pyrolysis
Pyrolysis apparatus
Mechanism of formation of a partial C60 cage from
naphthalene
14Synthesis
- Low-pressure benzene/oxygen diffusion flame
- p 12 40 torr, Tmax 1500 1700 K
- Precursor PAH
- Elimination of CO from oxidized PAH thought to be
a source of C pentagons - Highest yield of fullerenes
- High soot formation
- High dilution with argon
15Synthesis
- Atmospheric pressure combustion
Oxy-acetylene torch (Ferrocene (C10H10Fe)
Fe_at_C60)
Syringe injector Benzene, Dicyclopentadiene,
Pyridine (C5H5N), Thiophene (C4H4S)
Stainless steel plate on water-cooled brass block
(lt 800 K)
16Synthesis
- DC arc torch dissociation of C2Cl4
(tetrachlorethylene)
Operating conditions Torch power 56 kW He flow
rate 225 slm C2Cl4 feed rate 0.29 mol/min
17Synthesis
- Ion implantation
- Carbon ions 120 keV
- Copper substrates 7001000 ºC
- Thin film (diamond, fullerenes, onions)
- Endohedral fullerenes
- Evaporation of fullerene (C60) onto a substrate
- Ions of dopant
N_at_C60
18Solid State C60 - Fullerite
- Face-centered cubic (fcc)
- The most densely packed structure
- Lattice constant a 14.17 ?
- Weak Van der Waals bonds
- Soft
- Molecules spin nearly freely around centers
- Simple cubic (sc)
- Tlt261 K
- Fixed rotational axis
- 4 C60 molecules arranged at vertices of
tetraeder, spinning around different but fixed
axis - Weak coulombic interaction
- Fixed orientation of molecules
- Tlt90 K molecules entirely frozen
- Polymeric
- Covalent bonds
- Photo-excitation, molecular collisions,
high-pressure/temperature, ionization - Insolvable in toluene
19Purification
- Extraction from carbon soot
- Cnlt100 solvable in aromatic solvents
- Toluene, benzene, hexane, chloroform
- C60 magenta
- C70 dark red
- Cngt100 high boiling-solvents
- trichlorbenzene
- Separation by chromatograph
20Derivatives
- Intercalation (fullerides)
- Octahedral or tetrahedral inter. sites
- Alkali or alkaline-earth metal atoms
- Na, K, Rb, Cs, Ca, Sr and Ba)
- Charge transfer to the cage
- Superconductors
- Polymers
Ba6C60 7 K
K3C60 19 K
Rb3C60 29 K
Cs3C60 30 K
Cs2RbC60 33 K
Polymerized Rb1C60
C60-Fullerene tetrakis(dimethylamino)ethylene -
ferromagnet
21Derivatives
- Heterofullerenes
- Substitution of an impurity atom with a different
valence for C on the cage - B, N, BN Nb
- C59X (XB,N) nonlinear optical properties
- Deformation of the electronic structure, strong
enhancement of chemical activity - Radicals which can be stabilized by dimerization
Azafullerenes (a) C59N, (b) C59HN, and (c)
(C59N)2
C48N12
22Derivatives
- Exohedral
- Covalent addition of atom or molecule
- Hydrogenation
- C60H18, C60H36
- Fluorination
- C60F36, C70F34, C60F60 (teflon balls)
- Oxidation
- Organic groups and complexes
(eta2-C70-Fullerene)-carbonyl-chloro-bis(triphenyl
phosphine)-iridium
C60Cl6
23Derivatives
- Endohedral
- Synthesis
- Evaporation of doped carbon
- Arc, laser
- Ion implantation
- M_at_C60
- Noble gases
- without overlap of Van der Waals radii
- Metallofullerenes
- B, Al, Ga, Y, In, La
- Stabilize cages not fulfilling isolated
pentagons rule (nlt60) - With permanent dipole moment form di/trimers and
large aggregates on metal surfaces and C60 films - Alkali metals
- Lanthanide metals
- N, P (Group V)
Synthesis of microcapsules for medical
applications
N_at_C60
He_at_C60
24Properties
- C60 electron affinity EA 2.65 eV (Cl 3.62, )
- more electronegative than hydrocarbons
- Dissolves in common solvents like benzene,
toluene, hexane - Readily sublimes in vacuum around 400C
- Low thermal conductivity
- Pure C60 is an electrical insulator
- C60 doped with alkali metals shows a range of
electrical conductivity - Insulator (K6 C60) to superconductor (K3 C60) lt
30 K - Interesting magnetic and optical properties
- Ferromagnetism
- At high pressure C60 transfoms to diamond
- C60 soft and compressible brown/black odorless
powder/solid - Flexible chemical reactivity
breathing vibrational mode
Pentagonal pinch mode
25Properties
- Simulation of C60-C240 collision
- Simulation of C60 melting
Kinetic energy 10 eV
Kinetic energy 100 eV
Kinetic energy 300 eV
David Tomanek Theoretical Condensed Matter
Physics Michigan State University
26Potential applications
- Lubrication
- Molecular-sized ball bearing
- Not economical
- Superconductors
- Intercalation metal fullerides
- (Semi)Conductors
- Excellent conductors when compressed
- Photoconductors
- add conducting properties to other polymers as a
function of light intensity - Optical Limiters
- C60 and C70 solutions absorb high intensity
light protection for light-sensitive optical
sensors - Atom Encapsulation
- Radioactive waste encapsulation
- Ho_at_C82
Rh-C60 polymer with vacancies Excess spin
density Dipole moment of magnitude 2.264 Debye
per C60 unit
27Potential applications
- Diamond films
- Smoother than vaporizing graphite
- Novel polymers
- Optoelectronic nanomaterials and buliding blocks
for nanotechnology - Endohedral fullerenes
- Nanobots
- Medical applications
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging markers
- Metal organic complex (toxic Ga)
- contrast agents, tracers
- anti-viral (even anticancer) agents
- neuroprotective agents
- fullerene-based liposome drug delivery systems
- deployment of fullerene therapeutics to targeting
vehicles
MRI fullerene contrasting agent
- Water soluble tail (red gray)
- Encapsulates 2 gadolinium metal atoms (purple)
and 1 scandium (green) attached to central
nitrogen atom - H2O molecules (red yellow)
28Potential applications
- Potential AIDS inhibitor
- HIV reproduces by growing long protein chains
- Protein is cut in the active site of enzyme
HIV-protease - Derivative of C60 has been synthesized that is
soluable in water
Model of C60 docked in the binding site of HIV-1
protease