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Nanophysics: Serving up Buckyballs on a silver platter 7/31/2009

Scientists manipulate ripples in graphene, enabling strain-based graphene electronics 7/30/2009

Nanotech particles affect brain development in mice 7/30/2009

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Chasing tiny vehicles 7/21/2009

Facile synthesis of nanoparticles with multiple functions advanced in Singapore 7/15/2009

Nanopillars promise cheap, efficient, flexible solar cells 7/14/2009

Material world: Graphene's versatility promises new applications 7/13/2009

Contaminated site remediation: Are nanomaterials the answer? 7/12/2009

Spontaneous assembly 7/11/2009

Nanophysics: Serving up Buckyballs on a silver platter (7/31/2009)

Tags:
silver, electronics
Scientists have imaged the complete structure of C60 molecules on a silver surface with electron diffraction. - Image copyright American Physical Society [Illustration: Alan Stonebraker after H. I. Li et al.]
Scientists have imaged the complete structure of C60 molecules on a silver surface with electron diffraction. - Image copyright American Physical Society [Illustration: Alan Stonebraker after H. I. Li et al.]

Scientists at Penn State University, in collaboration with institutes in the US, Finland, Germany and the UK, have figured out the long-sought structure of a layer of C60 - carbon buckyballs - on a silver surface. The results, which could help in the design of carbon nanostructure-based electronics are reported in Physical Review Letters and highlighted in the July 27th issue of APS's on-line journal Physics (physics.aps.org).

Ever since the 1985 discovery of C60, this molecule, with its perfect geodesic dome shape has fascinated scientists, physicists, and chemists alike. Like a soccer ball, the molecule consists of 20 carbon hexagons and 12 carbon pentagons. The electronic properties of C60 are very unusual, and there is a massive research effort toward integrating it into molecular scale electronic devices like transistors and logic gates.

To do this, researchers need to know how the molecule forms bonds with a metal substrate, such as silver, which is commonly used as an electrode in devices. Now, Hsin-I Li, Renee Diehl, and colleagues have determined the geometry of C60 on a silver surface using a technique called low-energy electron diffraction.

They find that the silver atoms rearrange in such a way - namely, by forming a 'hole' beneath each C60 molecule - that reinforces the bonding between the carbon structure and the silver surface.

The measurements push the limits of surface science because the molecules and the re-arrangement of the underlying silver atoms are quite complex. The measurements thus open the door to studies of a large number of technologically and biologically important molecules on surfaces.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the American Physical Society

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