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Buckminsterfullerene is a type of fullerene with the formula C 60. It has a cage-like fused-ring structure (truncated icosahedron) made of twenty hexagons and twelve pentagons, and resembles a soccer ball. Each of its 60 carbon atoms is bonded to its three neighbors.
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Researchers have been able to increase the reactivity of fullerenes by attaching active groups to their surfaces. Buckminsterfullerene does not exhibit "superaromaticity": that is, the electrons in the hexagonal rings do not delocalize over the whole molecule. A spherical fullerene of n carbon atoms has n pi-bonding electrons, free to ...
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Fullerene or C 60 is soccer-ball-shaped or I h with 12 pentagons and 20 hexagons. According to Euler's theorem these 12 pentagons are required for closure of the carbon network consisting of n hexagons and C 60 is the first stable fullerene because it is the smallest possible to obey this rule.
The buckminsterfullerene molecule. Geodesic domes are typically based on triangular facetings of this geometry with example structures found across the world, popularized by Buckminster Fuller. An example can be found in the model of a buckminsterfullerene, a truncated icosahedron-shaped geodesic dome allotrope of elemental carbon discovered in ...
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Latviešu: Nemerēta versija vektorizētajai datnes Buckminsterfullerene-2D-skeletal.png versijai, sākotnējās datnes autoram esot lietotājam Benjah-bmm27 un modificētājam Nzjacobmartin. Veidots Inkscape. Numerācijas saskaņā ar IUPAC 2002. gada Rekomendācijām (Pure Appl. Chem., 2002, 74(4), 629-695).