Journal of Chemical Physics, Vol.115, No.13, 5830-5835, 2001
Coalescence of C-20 fullerenes
Coalescence of C-20(H)(n) fullerenes with n=0-4 was studied by laser desorption and ionization in a time-of-flight mass spectrometer (337 nm N-2 excimer laser). The fullerenes were produced by elimination of bromine from extensively brominated dodecahedranes (mixture, mean composition [C20H1Br13]equivalent toY, and mixtures with somewhat higher hydrogen content [C20H2Br12]equivalent toX) accessible by photobromination of the C20H20 cage hydrocarbon. For Y probes at 80 mJ/cm(2) laser fluence, coalescence of the generated C-20 fullerenes was identified as the dominant process providing a series of (C-20)(k)(+) oligomers (k=1-13); there is evidence for the formation of C-60(+) from C-20. At lower fluences (30 mJ/cm(2)) in the mass spectra measured near the desorption threshold or in the low ion velocity regime, the bromine substituents were not (totally) eliminated, the original degree of bromination has even been raised. High laser fluences (1500 mJ/cm(2)) primarily effect the bromine content, generating C20HnBrm ions with m ranging from 0 to 18, fullerene coalescence is suppressed. For X probes the only slightly higher hydrogen content inhibits C-20 coalescence; a C36H4+ ion is interpreted as fullerene.