Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7853489 | Carbon | 2014 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Nanosized fullerene solvates have attracted widespread research attention due to recent interesting discoveries. A particular type of solvate is limited to a fixed number of solvents and designing new solvates within the same family is a fundamental challenge. Here we demonstrate that the hexagonal closed packed (HCP) phase of C60 solvates, formed with m-xylene, can also be stabilized using toluene. Contrary to the notion on their instability, these can be stabilized from minutes up to months by tuning the occupancy of solvent molecules. Due to high stability, we could record their absorption edge, and measure excitonic life-time, which has not been reported for any C60 solvate. Despite being solid, absorbance spectrum of the solvates is similar in appearance to that of C60 in solution. A new absorption band appears at 673Â nm. The fluorescence lifetime at 760Â nm is â¼1.2Â ns, suggesting an excited state unaffected by solvent-C60 interaction. Finally, we utilized the unstable set of HCP solvates to exchange with a second solvent by a topotactic exchange mechanism, which rendered near permanent stability to the otherwise few minutes stable solvates. This is also the first example of topotactic exchange in supramolecular crystal, which is widely known in ionic solids.
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Authors
Moumita Rana, R.R. Bharathanatha, Ujjal K. Gautam,