Osmylation of C[sub 60]: Proof and characterization of the soccer-ball framework

When C[sub 60] was isolated in macroscopic quantities in 1990, it transcended the realm of gas-phase physical chemistry and availed itself to the characterization and utilizations of condensed matter. On one hand, it became a new material, a new allotrope of carbon. On the other hand, it became a ne...

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Veröffentlicht in:Accounts of chemical research 1992-03, Vol.25:3
1. Verfasser: Hawkins, J.M.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:When C[sub 60] was isolated in macroscopic quantities in 1990, it transcended the realm of gas-phase physical chemistry and availed itself to the characterization and utilizations of condensed matter. On one hand, it became a new material, a new allotrope of carbon. On the other hand, it became a new organic compound, one that did not contain elements other than carbon, and one that could serve as the parent and precursors to a whole class of novel organic compounds. When first available in macroscopic quantities, C[sub 60] was probed spectroscopically in a number of laboratories. The authors probed the structure of C[sub 60] chemically and found that the characterization of pure derivatives of C[sub 60] could yield information about C[sub 60] which could not be obtained directly. They prepared the first pure fullerene derivative, C[sub 60](OsO[sub 4])(4-tert-butylpyridine)[sub 2]. The characterization of this species yielded the first time atomic-resolution X-ray crystallographic analysis of the carbon framework of C[sub 60], thereby providing the first definitive proof of the buckminsterfullerene structure. Further analysis of 1 yielded the first measurement of coupling constants and hybridizations corresponding to that two types of bonds in C[sub 60] and the first quantitative labeling study probing the mechanism of C[sub 60] formation. 34 refs., 9 figs., 2 tabs.
ISSN:0001-4842
1520-4898
DOI:10.1021/ar00015a008