Chemical bonding between thorium atoms and a carbon hexagon in carbon nanomaterials

We explore the unusual nature of chemical bonding of thorium atoms with a ring of six carbon atoms (hexagon) in novel carbon materials. Our ab initio calculations of Th-based metallofullerenes (Th@C 60 and Th@C 20 ) and Th bound to benzene or coronene at the Hartree-Fock level with the second order...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP 2020-10, Vol.22 (39), p.2251-2257
Hauptverfasser: Bibikov, A. V, Nikolaev, A. V, Tkalya, E. V
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We explore the unusual nature of chemical bonding of thorium atoms with a ring of six carbon atoms (hexagon) in novel carbon materials. Our ab initio calculations of Th-based metallofullerenes (Th@C 60 and Th@C 20 ) and Th bound to benzene or coronene at the Hartree-Fock level with the second order perturbation (MP2) correction accounting for the van der Waals interactions demonstrate that the optimal position of the thorium atom is where it faces the center of a hexagon and is located at a distance of 2.01-2.07 Å from the center. For Th encapsulated in C 60 it is found at 2.01 Å, whereas the other local energy minima are shifted to larger energies (0.22 eV and higher). Inside C 60 the highest local minimum at 1.17 eV is observed when Th faces the center of the five member carbon ring (pentagon). Based on our calculations for Th with benzene and coronene where the global minimum for Th corresponds to its position at 2.05 Å (benzene) or 2.02 Å (coronene) from the hexagon center, we conclude that a well pronounced minimum is likely to be present in graphene and in a single wall carbon nanotube. The ground state of Th is singlet, and other high spin states (triplet and quintet) lie higher in energy (>1.62 eV). We discuss a potential use of carbon nanomaterials with the 229 Th isotope having its nuclear transition in the optical range, for metrological purposes. We explore the unusual nature of chemical bonding of thorium atoms with a ring of six carbon atoms (hexagon) in novel carbon materials.
ISSN:1463-9076
1463-9084
DOI:10.1039/d0cp03970e