Author
Listed:
- Elena Meirzadeh
(Columbia University)
- Austin M. Evans
(Columbia University
University of Florida)
- Mehdi Rezaee
(Harvard University)
- Milena Milich
(University of Virginia)
- Connor J. Dionne
(University of Rhode Island)
- Thomas P. Darlington
(Columbia University)
- Si Tong Bao
(Columbia University)
- Amymarie K. Bartholomew
(Columbia University)
- Taketo Handa
(Columbia University)
- Daniel J. Rizzo
(Columbia University)
- Ren A. Wiscons
(Amherst College)
- Mahniz Reza
(Barnard College)
- Amirali Zangiabadi
(Columbia University)
- Natalie Fardian-Melamed
(Columbia University)
- Andrew C. Crowther
(Barnard College)
- P. James Schuck
(Columbia University)
- D. N. Basov
(Columbia University)
- Xiaoyang Zhu
(Columbia University)
- Ashutosh Giri
(University of Rhode Island)
- Patrick E. Hopkins
(University of Virginia
University of Virginia
University of Virginia)
- Philip Kim
(Harvard University)
- Michael L. Steigerwald
(Columbia University)
- Jingjing Yang
(Columbia University)
- Colin Nuckolls
(Columbia University)
- Xavier Roy
(Columbia University)
Abstract
The two natural allotropes of carbon, diamond and graphite, are extended networks of sp3-hybridized and sp2-hybridized atoms, respectively1. By mixing different hybridizations and geometries of carbon, one could conceptually construct countless synthetic allotropes. Here we introduce graphullerene, a two-dimensional crystalline polymer of C60 that bridges the gulf between molecular and extended carbon materials. Its constituent fullerene subunits arrange hexagonally in a covalently interconnected molecular sheet. We report charge-neutral, purely carbon-based macroscopic crystals that are large enough to be mechanically exfoliated to produce molecularly thin flakes with clean interfaces—a critical requirement for the creation of heterostructures and optoelectronic devices2. The synthesis entails growing single crystals of layered polymeric (Mg4C60)∞ by chemical vapour transport and subsequently removing the magnesium with dilute acid. We explore the thermal conductivity of this material and find it to be much higher than that of molecular C60, which is a consequence of the in-plane covalent bonding. Furthermore, imaging few-layer graphullerene flakes using transmission electron microscopy and near-field nano-photoluminescence spectroscopy reveals the existence of moiré-like superlattices3. More broadly, the synthesis of extended carbon structures by polymerization of molecular precursors charts a clear path to the systematic design of materials for the construction of two-dimensional heterostructures with tunable optoelectronic properties.
Suggested Citation
Elena Meirzadeh & Austin M. Evans & Mehdi Rezaee & Milena Milich & Connor J. Dionne & Thomas P. Darlington & Si Tong Bao & Amymarie K. Bartholomew & Taketo Handa & Daniel J. Rizzo & Ren A. Wiscons & M, 2023.
"A few-layer covalent network of fullerenes,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 613(7942), pages 71-76, January.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:613:y:2023:i:7942:d:10.1038_s41586-022-05401-w
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05401-w
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