The research described in this product was performed in part in the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, a national scientific user facility sponsored by the Department of Energy's Office of Biological and Environmental Research and located at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. The atomic electron orbitals that underlie molecular bonding originate from the central Coulomb
potential of the atomic core. We used scanning tunneling microscopy and density functional theory
to explore the relation between the nearly spherical shape and unoccupied electronic structure of
buckminsterfullerene (C60) molecules adsorbed on copper surfaces. Besides the known p* antibonding
molecular orbitals of the carbon-atom framework, above 3.5 electron volts we found atomlike
orbitals bound to the core of the hollow C60 cage. These “superatom” states hybridize like the s and
p orbitals of hydrogen and alkali atoms into diatomic molecule-like dimers and free-electron bands of
one-dimensional wires and two-dimensional quantum wells in C60 aggregates. We attribute the
superatom states to the central potential binding an electron to its screening charge, a property expected
for hollow-shell molecules derived from layered materials.
Revised: April 7, 2011 |
Published: April 17, 2008
Citation
Feng M., J. Zhao, and H. Petek. 2008.Atomlike, Hollow-Core–Bound Molecular Orbitals of C60.Science 320, no. 5874:359-362. doi:10.1126/science.1155866