6 research outputs found
Ni-Assisted Transformation of Graphene Flakes to Fullerenes
Transformation of graphene flakes to fullerenes assisted
by Ni clusters is investigated using molecular dynamics simulations.
The bond-order potential for Ni–C systems is developed. The
potential reproduces the experimental and first-principles data on
the physical properties of pure Ni as well as on relative energies
of carbon species on Ni surfaces and in Ni bulk. The potential is
applied for molecular dynamics simulations of the transformation of
graphene flakes consisting of 50–400 atoms with and without
Ni clusters attached. Free fullerenes, fullerenes with Ni clusters
attached from outside, and fullerenes encapsulating Ni clusters (Ni
endofullerenes) are observed to form in the presence of Ni clusters
consisting of 5–80 atoms. Moreover, a new type of heterofullerenes
with a patch made of a Ni cluster is found to form as an intermediate
structure during the transformation. The Ni clusters are shown to
reduce the activation energy for the graphene–fullerene transformation
from 4.0 eV to 1.5–1.9 eV, providing the decrease of the minimal
temperature at which such a transformation can be observed experimentally
from about 1400 K for free graphene flakes to about 700–800
K. While the transformation of free graphene flakes is found to occur
through formation of chains of two-coordinated carbon atoms at the
flake edges, the mechanism of the Ni-assisted graphene–fullerene
transformation is revealed to be based on the transfer of carbon atoms
from the graphene flake to the Ni cluster and back. The way of controlled
synthesis of endofullerenes with a transition metal cluster inside
and heterofullerenes with a transition metal patch is also proposed
Ni-Assisted Transformation of Graphene Flakes to Fullerenes
Transformation of graphene flakes to fullerenes assisted
by Ni clusters is investigated using molecular dynamics simulations.
The bond-order potential for Ni–C systems is developed. The
potential reproduces the experimental and first-principles data on
the physical properties of pure Ni as well as on relative energies
of carbon species on Ni surfaces and in Ni bulk. The potential is
applied for molecular dynamics simulations of the transformation of
graphene flakes consisting of 50–400 atoms with and without
Ni clusters attached. Free fullerenes, fullerenes with Ni clusters
attached from outside, and fullerenes encapsulating Ni clusters (Ni
endofullerenes) are observed to form in the presence of Ni clusters
consisting of 5–80 atoms. Moreover, a new type of heterofullerenes
with a patch made of a Ni cluster is found to form as an intermediate
structure during the transformation. The Ni clusters are shown to
reduce the activation energy for the graphene–fullerene transformation
from 4.0 eV to 1.5–1.9 eV, providing the decrease of the minimal
temperature at which such a transformation can be observed experimentally
from about 1400 K for free graphene flakes to about 700–800
K. While the transformation of free graphene flakes is found to occur
through formation of chains of two-coordinated carbon atoms at the
flake edges, the mechanism of the Ni-assisted graphene–fullerene
transformation is revealed to be based on the transfer of carbon atoms
from the graphene flake to the Ni cluster and back. The way of controlled
synthesis of endofullerenes with a transition metal cluster inside
and heterofullerenes with a transition metal patch is also proposed
Ni-Assisted Transformation of Graphene Flakes to Fullerenes
Transformation of graphene flakes to fullerenes assisted
by Ni clusters is investigated using molecular dynamics simulations.
The bond-order potential for Ni–C systems is developed. The
potential reproduces the experimental and first-principles data on
the physical properties of pure Ni as well as on relative energies
of carbon species on Ni surfaces and in Ni bulk. The potential is
applied for molecular dynamics simulations of the transformation of
graphene flakes consisting of 50–400 atoms with and without
Ni clusters attached. Free fullerenes, fullerenes with Ni clusters
attached from outside, and fullerenes encapsulating Ni clusters (Ni
endofullerenes) are observed to form in the presence of Ni clusters
consisting of 5–80 atoms. Moreover, a new type of heterofullerenes
with a patch made of a Ni cluster is found to form as an intermediate
structure during the transformation. The Ni clusters are shown to
reduce the activation energy for the graphene–fullerene transformation
from 4.0 eV to 1.5–1.9 eV, providing the decrease of the minimal
temperature at which such a transformation can be observed experimentally
from about 1400 K for free graphene flakes to about 700–800
K. While the transformation of free graphene flakes is found to occur
through formation of chains of two-coordinated carbon atoms at the
flake edges, the mechanism of the Ni-assisted graphene–fullerene
transformation is revealed to be based on the transfer of carbon atoms
from the graphene flake to the Ni cluster and back. The way of controlled
synthesis of endofullerenes with a transition metal cluster inside
and heterofullerenes with a transition metal patch is also proposed
Ni-Assisted Transformation of Graphene Flakes to Fullerenes
Transformation of graphene flakes to fullerenes assisted
by Ni clusters is investigated using molecular dynamics simulations.
The bond-order potential for Ni–C systems is developed. The
potential reproduces the experimental and first-principles data on
the physical properties of pure Ni as well as on relative energies
of carbon species on Ni surfaces and in Ni bulk. The potential is
applied for molecular dynamics simulations of the transformation of
graphene flakes consisting of 50–400 atoms with and without
Ni clusters attached. Free fullerenes, fullerenes with Ni clusters
attached from outside, and fullerenes encapsulating Ni clusters (Ni
endofullerenes) are observed to form in the presence of Ni clusters
consisting of 5–80 atoms. Moreover, a new type of heterofullerenes
with a patch made of a Ni cluster is found to form as an intermediate
structure during the transformation. The Ni clusters are shown to
reduce the activation energy for the graphene–fullerene transformation
from 4.0 eV to 1.5–1.9 eV, providing the decrease of the minimal
temperature at which such a transformation can be observed experimentally
from about 1400 K for free graphene flakes to about 700–800
K. While the transformation of free graphene flakes is found to occur
through formation of chains of two-coordinated carbon atoms at the
flake edges, the mechanism of the Ni-assisted graphene–fullerene
transformation is revealed to be based on the transfer of carbon atoms
from the graphene flake to the Ni cluster and back. The way of controlled
synthesis of endofullerenes with a transition metal cluster inside
and heterofullerenes with a transition metal patch is also proposed
Ni-Assisted Transformation of Graphene Flakes to Fullerenes
Transformation of graphene flakes to fullerenes assisted
by Ni clusters is investigated using molecular dynamics simulations.
The bond-order potential for Ni–C systems is developed. The
potential reproduces the experimental and first-principles data on
the physical properties of pure Ni as well as on relative energies
of carbon species on Ni surfaces and in Ni bulk. The potential is
applied for molecular dynamics simulations of the transformation of
graphene flakes consisting of 50–400 atoms with and without
Ni clusters attached. Free fullerenes, fullerenes with Ni clusters
attached from outside, and fullerenes encapsulating Ni clusters (Ni
endofullerenes) are observed to form in the presence of Ni clusters
consisting of 5–80 atoms. Moreover, a new type of heterofullerenes
with a patch made of a Ni cluster is found to form as an intermediate
structure during the transformation. The Ni clusters are shown to
reduce the activation energy for the graphene–fullerene transformation
from 4.0 eV to 1.5–1.9 eV, providing the decrease of the minimal
temperature at which such a transformation can be observed experimentally
from about 1400 K for free graphene flakes to about 700–800
K. While the transformation of free graphene flakes is found to occur
through formation of chains of two-coordinated carbon atoms at the
flake edges, the mechanism of the Ni-assisted graphene–fullerene
transformation is revealed to be based on the transfer of carbon atoms
from the graphene flake to the Ni cluster and back. The way of controlled
synthesis of endofullerenes with a transition metal cluster inside
and heterofullerenes with a transition metal patch is also proposed
Formation of Nickel Clusters Wrapped in Carbon Cages: Toward New Endohedral Metallofullerene Synthesis
Despite
the high potential of endohedral metallofullerenes (EMFs) for application
in biology, medicine and molecular electronics, and recent efforts
in EMF synthesis, the variety of EMFs accessible by conventional synthetic
methods remains limited and does not include, for example, EMFs of
late transition metals. We propose a method in which EMF formation
is initiated by electron irradiation in aberration-corrected high-resolution
transmission electron spectroscopy (AC-HRTEM) of a metal cluster surrounded
by amorphous carbon inside a carbon nanotube serving as a nanoreactor
and apply this method for synthesis of nickel EMFs. The use of AC-HRTEM
makes it possible not only to synthesize new, previously unattainable
nanoobjects but also to study in situ the mechanism of structural
transformations. Molecular dynamics simulations using the state-of-the-art
approach for modeling the effect of electron irradiation are performed
to rationalize the experimental observations and to link the observed
processes with conditions of bulk EMF synthesis