Three-Dimensional Metallic Form of Carbon Discovered in Theory
A theoretical, three-dimensional form of carbon that is metallic under ambient temperature and pressure has been discovered by an international research team.
Carbon science is a field of intense research. Not only does carbon form the chemical basis of life, but it has rich chemistry and physics, making it a target of interest to material scientists. From graphite to diamond to Buckminster fullerenes, nanotubes and graphene, carbon can display in a range of structures.
But the search for a stable three-dimensional form of carbon that is metallic under ambient conditions, including temperature and pressure, has remained an ongoing challenge for scientists in the field.
Researchers from Peking University, Virginia Commonwealth University and Shanghai Institute of Technical Physics employed state-of-the-art theoretical methods to show that it is possible to manipulate carbon to form a three-dimensional metallic phase with interlocking hexagons.
"The interlocking of hexagons provides two unique features - hexagonal arrangement introduces metallic character, and the interlocking form with tetrahedral bonding guarantees stability," said co-lead investigator Puru Jena, Ph.D., distinguished professor of physics in the VCU College of Humanities and Sciences.
The right combination of these properties could one day be applied to a variety of technologies.
"The new metallic carbon structures may have important applications in lightweight metals for space applications, catalysis and in devices showing negative differential resistance or superconductivity," Wang said.
According to Jena, the team is still early in its discovery process, but hope that these findings may move the work from theory to the experimental phase.
Reference:
Shunhong Zhang et al., Stable three-dimensional metallic carbon with interlocking hexagons, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1311028110
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