Publication | Closed Access
New Phases of C <sub>60</sub> Synthesized at High Pressure
669
Citations
7
References
1994
Year
Materials EngineeringMaterials ScienceCrystal StructureMolecular SolidEngineeringNew PhasesPhase EquilibriumChemical BondApplied PhysicsFullerene CHigh PressureSolid-state ChemistryFullerenePhysical ChemistryComputational ChemistryChemistryCrystallographyCrystal Structure Design
The fullerene C(60) can be converted into two different structures by high pressure and temperature. They are metastable and revert to pristine C(60) on reheating to 300 degrees C at ambient pressure. For synthesis temperatures between 300 degrees and 400 degrees C and pressures of 5 gigapascals, a nominal face-centered-cubic structure is produced with a lattice parameter a(o) = 13.6 angstroms. When treated at 500 degrees to 800 degrees C at the same pressure, C(60) transforms into a rhombohedral structure with hexagonal lattice parameters of a(o) = 9.22 angstroms and c(o) = 24.6 angstroms. The intermolecular distance is small enough that a chemical bond can form, in accord with the reduced solubility of the pressure-induced phases. Infrared, Raman, and nuclear magnetic resonance studies show a drastic reduction of icosahedral symmetry, as might occur if the C(60) molecules are linked.
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1993 | 1.1K | |
1993 | 1.1K | |
1992 | 473 | |
1991 | 357 | |
1992 | 267 | |
1993 | 110 | |
1991 | 97 |
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