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         Kroto Sir Harold W:     more detail

101. == RESEARCH == Fullerenes
was rewarded with the 1996 Nobel Prize for Chemistry to Robert F. Curl Jr., SirHarold W. kroto and Richard E. Smalley (see the web page here). Figure 1
http://www-klinowski.ch.cam.ac.uk/fullerenes.htm
For many hundreds of years, diamond and graphite (Figure 1) were the only known crystalline allotropic forms of carbon. The discovery in the 1980’s of fullerenes, a family of crystalline C n compounds (with n even), was rewarded with the 1996 Nobel Prize for Chemistry to Robert F. Curl Jr., Sir Harold W. Kroto and Richard E. Smalley (see the web page here Figure 1 The most prominent of these are fullerenes C60 (Figure 2) and C70. Following the first preparation of fullerenes in macroscopic amounts and the development of high-yield preparative procedures, fullerenes have been subjected to intensive scrutiny. Their unique structure and properties suggest potential applications in materials science (for the production of superconductors, superhard phases and synthetic diamond), synthetic chemistry and medicine (targeted cancer therapy). Figure 2 A C MAS NMR spectrum of carbon soot produced in the course of fullerene synthesis shows that both C60 and C70 fullerenes are clearly present. 1H MAS NMR detects dilute H-containing species in purified C60. We have identified various fulleroids containing –HC=CHCH2CH3, –HC=CHCH3 and –HC=CH– groups, as well as toluene and dioctylphtalate (DOP) impurities. The H-containing species are so dilute that they cannot communicate by intermolecular spin diffusion. The intramolecular spin-diffusion paths suggest that the alkyl chains of DOP are folded back towards the aromatic ring.

102. IN-VSEE Archives
“INVSEE Project in Nanoscience and Technology”, W. Glaunsinger, sir HaroldKroto Nobel Laureate in Chemistry 1996 (University of Sussex,
http://invsee.asu.edu/Invsee/present.html
"Interactive Nano-Visualization for Science and Engineering Education", B.L. Ramakrishna, Microscopy Society of America (Atlanta, GA, July 13th, 1998). "Interactive Nano-Visualization for Science and Engineering Education", B.L. Ramakrishna, Materials Education Workshop sponsored by NSF's DMR, (Santa Barbara, October 21-23, 1998). "Multiple Uses of the Internet in the Undergraduate Biology Classroom", Pushpa Ramakrishna, AACE conference (Orlando, Fla, November 13, 1998). “Distance Education Via the World Wide Web”, W. Glaunsinger, B. Ramakrishna, E. Ong. V. Pizziconi, and A. Garcia, 217th ACS National Meeting, (Anaheim, CA, March 21-25, 1999). “Remote Scanning Probe Microscopy and Distance Learning in Chemistry”, W. Glaunsinger, E. Ong, B. Ramakrishna, V. Pizziconi, A. Razdan, and A. Garcia, 218th ACS National Meeting, (New Orleans, LA, August 22-26, 1999). “Scanning Probe Microscopy Nanolaboratory Development Project and Beyond”, W. Glaunsinger, B. Ramakrishna, A. Garcia, and V. Pizziconi, 218th ACS National Meeting, (New Orleans, LA, August 22-26, 1999). “The Interactive Nanovisualization for Science and Engineering Education”, W. Glaunsinger, J. Birk, B. Ramakrishna, and E. Ong, Gordon Research Conference on Innovations in College Chemistry Teaching, (New London, CT, June 20-24, 1999).

103. Polimerica - Il Portale Delle Materie Plastiche - Nanotecnologie: Un Nobel A Tor

http://www.polimerica.it/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1393

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