Gas-phase production and photoelectron spectroscopy of the smallest fullerene, C20
Top Cited Papers
- 1 September 2000
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 407 (6800) , 60-63
- https://doi.org/10.1038/35024037
Abstract
Fullerenes are graphitic cage structures incorporating exactly twelve pentagons. The smallest possible fullerene is thus C20, which consists solely of pentagons. But the extreme curvature and reactivity of this structure have led to doubts about its existence and stability. Although theoretical calculations have identified, besides this cage, a bowl and a monocyclic ring isomer as low-energy members of the C20 cluster family, only ring isomers of C20 have been observed so far. Here we show that the cage-structured fullerene C20 can be produced from its perhydrogenated form (dodecahedrane C20H20) by replacing the hydrogen atoms with relatively weakly bound bromine atoms, followed by gas-phase debromination. For comparison we have also produced the bowl isomer of C20 using the same procedure. We characterize the generated C20 clusters using mass-selective anion photoelectron spectroscopy; the observed electron affinities and vibrational structures of these two C20 isomers differ significantly from each other, as well as from those of the known monocyclic isomer. We expect that these unique C20 species will serve as a benchmark test for further theoretical studies.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- C36, a hexavalent building block for fullerene compounds and solidsChemical Physics Letters, 1999
- Small Carbon Clusters: Spectroscopy, Structure, and EnergeticsChemical Reviews, 1998
- C36, a new carbon solidNature, 1998
- Photoelectron spectroscopy of Cn− produced from laser ablated dehydroannulene derivatives having carbon ring size of n=12, 16, 18, 20, and 24The Journal of Chemical Physics, 1997
- Stable Configurations of Carbon Clusters: Chains, Rings, and FullerenesPhysical Review Letters, 1995
- Smaller carbon species in the laboratory and spaceInternational Journal of Mass Spectrometry and Ion Processes, 1994
- Experimental evidence for the formation of fullerenes by collisional heating of carbon rings in the gas phaseNature, 1993
- Do small fullerenes exist only on the computer? Experimental results on C=/−20 and C+/−24Chemical Physics Letters, 1993
- UPS of 2–30-atom carbon clusters: Chains and ringsChemical Physics Letters, 1988
- The stability of the fullerenes Cn, with n = 24, 28, 32, 36, 50, 60 and 70Nature, 1987