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Molecular surgery traps hydrogen inside carbon cage.


In a feat of precision chemistry, scientists have locked a single hydrogen molecule inside a soccer ball-shaped carbon molecule known as a buckyball buckyball, colloquial term for buckminsterfullerene, a roughly spherical fullerene molecule consisting of 60 carbon atoms.

Buckytube is a generic term for cylindrical fullerenes.
, and they have used the technique to make large quantities of the tiny containers.

Encapsulating gases or metal atoms inside buckyballs or other types of carbon cages can endow en·dow  
tr.v. en·dowed, en·dow·ing, en·dows
1. To provide with property, income, or a source of income.

2.
a.
 the structures with unique electronic properties. Such structures could serve as transistors in molecular-scale electronic devices or as contrast agents for medical imaging, some researchers say. However, previous strategies for trapping tiny things inside carbon cages are inefficient and require extreme conditions.

To get the hydrogen inside the buckyball, Koichi Komatsu of Kyoto University Kyoto University (京都大学 Kyōto daigaku  in Japan and his colleagues synthesized a buckyballs with each ball perforated by a hole with a sulfur atom in its rim. Once the two-atom hydrogen molecule entered the hole, the researchers sewed up the buckyball using a series of chemical reactions This is the 18th episode of television drama Men in Trees. It originally aired on June 25, 2007 on the TV2 network in New Zealand as a continuation of season 1. Recap
Marin and Cash have a stew cook off, she admits his is better than hers.
.

First, they oxidized oxidized

having been modified by the process of oxidation.


oxidized cellulose
see absorbable cellulose.
 the sulfur atom to create a sulfoxide sulf·ox·ide
n.
Any of various compounds that contain a sulfinyl group.



sulfoxide

1. the divalent radical =SO.

2. an organic compound intermediate between a sulfide and a sulfone.
 group along the rim. Then, they exposed the buckyballs to light, which removed the sulfoxide group and caused the hole to shrink. Adding a titanium-containing compound tightened the hole even further. Finally, the researchers heated the buckyballs at 340[degrees]C for 2 hours to seal the gap. The process fills all the buckyballs with hydrogen, whereas alternative processes have yields of only a few percent, the Kyoto researchers report in the Jan. 14 Science.
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Title Annotation:Chemistry
Author:Goho, Alexandra
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Feb 19, 2005
Words:233
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