In this paper, a new energy decomposition analysis scheme based on the generalized Kohn-Sham (GKS) and the localized molecular orbital energy decomposition analysis (LMO-EDA) scheme, named GKS-EDA, is proposed. The GKS-EDA scheme has a wide range of DFT functional adaptability compared to LMO-EDA. In the GKS-EDA scheme, the exchange, repulsion, and polarization terms are determined by DFT orbitals; the correlation term is defined as the difference of the GKS correlation energy from monomers to supermolecule. Using the new definition, the GKS-EDA scheme avoids the error of LMO-EDA which comes from the separated treatment of EX and EC functionals. The scheme can perform analysis both in the gas and in the condensed phases with most of the popular DFT functionals, including LDA, GGA, meta-GGA, hybrid GGA/meta-GGA, double hybrid, range-separated (long-range correction), and dispersion correction. By the GKS-EDA scheme, the DFT functionals assessment for hydrogen bonding, vdW interaction, symmetric radical cation, charge-transfer, and metal-ligand interaction is performed.
We report a chemical separation method to isolate f ullertubes: a new and soluble allotrope of carbon whose structure merges nanotube, graphene, and fullerene subunits. Fullertubes possess single-walled carbon nanotube belts resembling a rolled graphene midsection, but with half-fullerene end-caps. Unlike nanotubes, fullertubes are reproducible in structure, possess a defined molecular weight, and are soluble in pristine form. The high reactivity of amines with spheroidal fullerene cages enables their removal and allows a facile isolation of C 96 -D 3d (3), C 90 -D 5h (1), and C 100 -D 5d (1) fullertubes. A nonchromatographic step (Stage 1) uses a selective reaction of carbon cages with aminopropanol to permit a highly enriched sample of fullertubes. Spheroidal fullerenes are reacted and removed by attaching water-soluble groups onto their cage surfaces. With this enriched (100−1000 times) fullertube mixture, Stage 2 becomes a simple HPLC collection with a single column. This two-stage separation approach permits fullertubes in scalable quantities. Characterization of purified C 100 -D 5d (1) fullertubes is done with samples isolated in pristine and unfunctionalized form. Surprisingly, C 60 and C 100 -D 5d (1) are both purplish in solution. For X-ray crystallographic analysis, we used decapyrrylcorannulene (DPC). Isomerically purified C 90 and C 100 fullertubes were mixed with DPC to obtain black cocrystals of 2DPC{C 90 -D 5h (1)}•4(toluene) and 2DPC{C 100 -D 5d (1)}•4(toluene), respectively. A serendipitous outcome of this chemical separation approach is the enrichment and purification of several unreported larger carbon species, e.g., C 120 , C 132 , and C 156 . Isolation of these higher cage species represents a significant advance in the unknown experimental arena of C 100 -C 200 structures. Our findings represent seminal experimental evidence for the existence of two mathematically predicted families of fullertubes: one family with an axial hexagon with the other series based on an axial pentagon ring. Fullertubes have been predicted theoretically, and herein is their experimental evidence, isolation, and initial characterization.
Bulk chemicals such as ethylene glycol (EG) can be industrially synthesized from either ethylene or syngas, but the latter undergoes a bottleneck reaction and requires high hydrogen pressures. We show that fullerene (exemplified by C 60 ) can act as an electron buffer for a copper-silica catalyst (Cu/SiO 2 ). Hydrogenation of dimethyl oxalate over a C 60 -Cu/SiO 2 catalyst at ambient pressure and temperatures of 180° to 190°C had an EG yield of up to 98 ± 1%. In a kilogram-scale reaction, no deactivation of the catalyst was seen after 1000 hours. This mild route for the final step toward EG can be combined with the already-industrialized ambient reaction from syngas to the intermediate of dimethyl oxalate.
The assembly of spherical fullerenes, or buckyballs, into single crystals for crystallographic identification often suffers from disordered arrangement. Here we show a chiral configuration of decapyrrylcorannulene that has a concave ‘palm’ of corannulene and ten flexible electron-rich pyrryl group ‘fingers’ to mimic the smart molecular ‘hands’ for self-adaptably cradling various buckyballs in a (+)hand-ball-hand(−) mode. As exemplified by crystallographic identification of 15 buckyball structures representing pristine, exohedral, endohedral, dimeric and hetero-derivatization, the pyrryl groups twist with varying dihedral angles to adjust the interaction between decapyrrylcorannulene and fullerene. The self-adaptable electron-rich pyrryl groups, susceptible to methylation, are theoretically revealed to contribute more than the bowl-shaped palm of the corannulene in holding buckyball structures. The generality of the present decapyrrylcorannulene host with flexible pyrryl groups facilitates the visualization of numerous unknown/unsolved fullerenes by crystallography and the assembly of the otherwise close-packed spherical fullerenes into two-dimensional layered structures by intercalation.
Carboncones, a special family of all-carbon allotropes, are predicted to have unique properties that distinguish them from fullerenes, carbon nanotubes, and graphenes. Owing to the absence of methods to synthesize atomically well-defined carboncones, however, experimental insight into the nature of pure carboncones has been inaccessible. Herein, we describe a facile synthesis of an atomically well-defined carboncone[1,2] (C70H20) and its soluble penta-mesityl derivative. Identified by x-ray crystallography, the carbon skeleton is a carboncone with the largest possible apex angle. Much of the structural strain is overcome in the final step of converting the bowl-shaped precursor into the rigid carboncone under mild reaction conditions. This work provides a research opportunity for investigations of atomically precise single-layered carboncones having even higher cone walls and/or smaller apex angles.
The combustion has long been applied for industrial synthesis of carbon materials such as fullerenes as well as carbon particles (known as carbon black), but the components and structures of the carbon soot are far from being clarified. Herein, we retrieve an unprecedented hydrofullerene C 66 H 4 from a soot of a low-pressure combustion of benzene−acetylene−oxygen. Unambiguously characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, the C 66 H 4 renders a nonclassical geometry incorporating two heptagons and two pairs of fused pentagons in a C 2v symmetry. The common vertexes of the fused pentagons are bonded with four hydrogen atoms to convert the hydrogen-linking carbon atoms from sp 2 to sp 3 hybridization, which together with the adjacent heptagons essentially releases the sp 2 -bond strains on the abutting-pentagon sites of the diheptagonal fused pentagon C 66 (dihept-C 66 ). DFT computations suggest the possibility for an in situ hydrogenation process leading to stabilization of the dihept-C 66 . In addition, the experiments have been carried out to study heptagon-dependent properties of dihept-C 66 H 4 , indicating the key responsibility of the heptagon for changing hydrocarbon activity and electronic properties. The present work with the unprecedented doubleheptagon-containing hydrofullerene successfully isolated and identified as one of the low-pressure combustion products shows that the heptagon is a new building block for constructing fullerene products in addition to pentagons and hexagons in lowpressure combustion systems.
Despite their multifaceted advantages, inverted perovskite solar cells (PSCs) still suffer from lower power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) than their regular counterparts, which is largely due to recombination energy losses (E loss) that arise from the chemical, physical, and energy level mismatches, especially at the interfaces between perovskites and fullerene electron transport layers (ETLs). To address this problem, we herein introduce an aminium iodide derivative of a buckybowl (aminocorannulene) that is molecularly layered at the perovskite–ETL interface. Strikingly, besides passivating the PbI2-rich perovskite surface, the aminocorannulene enforces a vertical dipole and enhances the surface n-type character that is more compatible with the ETL, thus boosting the electron extraction and transport dynamics and suppressing interfacial E loss. As a result, the champion PSC achieves an excellent PCE of over 22%, which is superior compared to that of the control device (∼20%). Furthermore, the device stability is significantly enhanced, owing to a lock-and-key-like grip on the mobile iodides by the buckybowls and the resultant increase of the interfacial ion-migration barrier. This work highlights the potential of buckybowls for the multifunctional surface engineering of perovskite toward high-performance and stable PSCs.
C 61 -butyric acid methyl ester remains indispensable as the electron transport material (ETM) for perovskite solar cells (PSCs), but its synthesis involves complicated multisteps with low productivity. In contrast, the potential of synthesizing simpler fulleropyrrolidine derivatives has long been overlooked, and little has been understood regarding their structuredependent effects on photovoltaic (PV) performance. Herein, seven novel fulleropyrrolidine derivatives (F1-F7) are deliberately designed, synthesized, and comprehensively characterized in both solution and thin-film states and subsequently investigated as ETMs for PSCs. Notably, the F4 delivers the highest power conversion efficiencies over 20% of devices, which surpass all reported fulleropyrrolidine ETMs due to its optimal photoelectric property. Moreover, the structure-dependent effects of the fullerenes on PV parameters are uncovered, including solubility, intermolecular interaction, packing structure, and charge-transfer ability, which can guide the future design of highperformance and stable fullerene ETMs for PSCs.
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