View Full Version : Richard Smalley Dies
Airencracken
10-30-2005, 11:54 PM
Nobel winner who discovered 'buckyballs' dead at 62
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Rice University professor Richard Smalley, who shared a 1996 Nobel Prize in chemistry for the discovery of "buckyballs," has died of cancer at the age of 62, the university said on Friday.
Buckyballs, short for buckminsterfullerenes, were a form of carbon that had 60 atoms arranged in a hollow sphere and whose discovery in 1985 opened the way for the development of the field of nanotechnology.
Smalley, fellow Rice chemist Robert Curl and British chemist Harold Kroto shared the prize for their work on buckyballs, which were named for architect and geodesic dome inventor Buckminster Fuller.
After winning the Nobel, Smalley became a strong advocate for the development of nanotechnology as a means of solving global problems, particularly in the field of energy.
"We are about to be able to build things that work on the smallest possible length scales, atom by atom, with the ultimate level of finesse," Smalley told the U.S. House of Representatives in 1999 during testimony in support of the National Nanotechnology Initiative.
"These little nanothings, and the technology that assembles and manipulates them -- nanotechnology -- will revolutionize our industries and our lives," he said.
Smalley became ill with cancer in 1999 and fought the disease for six years. He died on Friday at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston surrounded by family and friends, the university said.
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=scienceNews&storyID=2005-10-29T001741Z_01_HO901044_RTRUKOC_0_US-BUCKYBALLS.xml
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BigJon
10-31-2005, 04:23 AM
Sixty-two...damn...that was still young.
mcs328
10-31-2005, 06:39 AM
I remember reading about the discovery of Buckeyballs in Discovery magazine. It had a big potential.
Grimm
10-31-2005, 09:54 AM
I remember hearing how they are increadibly toxic.
Kevster
10-31-2005, 12:15 PM
I remember hearing how they are increadibly toxic.
Only certain types. Other types can be relatively benign.
RIP Richard Smalley.
tupacboy
10-31-2005, 01:23 PM
how sad... i had the pleasure of meeting him over lunch while i was @ ucla... he was good friends with one of my ochem professors... may he RIP...
guiseppewv
10-31-2005, 04:21 PM
RIP Mr. Smalley. :(
guiseppewv
10-31-2005, 04:25 PM
Here is a short article on Buckyballs:
BUCKYBALLS
The discovery of a new form of a pure element is a rather rare occurrence, especially for a common element. Therefore, reports of such discoveries generate an unusual amount of excitement among scientists. An example is the 1985 discovery of a new allotropic form of elemental carbon. The two well-known forms of elemental carbon are graphite and diamond. Both of these contain extended arrays of carbon atoms. In the new form, the carbon atoms are arranged in relatively small clusters of atoms.
In graphite, the carbon atoms are arranged in sheets with the bonds between the atoms forming hexagons, something like chicken wire. The sheets are only weakly bonded to each other, so they slide past one another, giving graphite a slippery feel and making it a good lubricant. Graphite is also used extensively in studies of the surface effects of energy in the form of light, heat, and electric current. When graphite is subjected to large bursts of energy of these sorts, portions of the top sheet of carbon atoms are ripped out. The ejected portions are studied to learn how the energy interacts with a solid surface.
In the early 1980s, Harold W. Kroto of the University of Sussex in England was using microwave spectroscopy to analyze the composition of carbon-rich stars. The analysis indicated that the atmosphere of these stars contained cyanopolyynes, which are composed of chains of alternating carbon and nitrogen atoms. Prof. Kroto wanted to study how these chains could be formed. He contacted Robert F. Curl and Richard E. Smalley at Rice University in Texas because they had been using microwave spectroscopy to analyze clusters of metals formed in Prof. Smalley’s lab. Prof. Smalley had an apparatus that could vaporize nearly any material into a plasma. In 1985, Kroto joined Curl and Smalley in Smalley’s lab to study the products of carbon vaporization. They fired a high-energy laser beam at a graphite surface and used a stream of helium gas to carry the fragments into a mass spectrometer. The mass spectrometer revealed the masses of the fragments of graphite ejected from the surface. These fragments varied from several atoms up to about 190 atoms. The distribution of fragments depended on the pressure of helium in the carrier stream. As the pressure increased from several torr to about 1 atm, the distribution of fragments changed, and the fragment containing sixty carbon atoms became by far the dominant one. Because the laser pulse and graphite surface had not changed, they reasoned that the fragments that broke off were not changing, but instead that the way these fragments interacted on their way into the mass spectrometer changed. At higher helium pressures, the fragments would be jostled together more than at lower pressures. This jostling leads to the formation of the most stable form of small carbon atom cluster, namely C60.
Kroto, Smalley, and Curl wondered how the atoms in this cluster were arranged to make it more stable than other clusters. They believed that its stability came from an arrangement in which all bonding capacity of the atoms is satisfied. In a small fragment of carbon-atom sheet ejected from a graphite surface, the atoms around the edge of the sheet would not be fully bonded. If, however, the sheet were to form into a ball so the edges would meet, the bonding capacity of all atoms would be satisfied. In thinking of how the atoms are arranged in this ball, the scientists considered the geodesic domes designed by the architect-engineer, R. Buckminster Fuller. These domes led them to suspect a structure of interlocking hexagons and pentagons, identical to those of a soccer ball. Because this idea was inspired by the geodesic dome, they named this C60 allotrope of carbon buckminsterfullerene.
The amounts of buckminsterfullerene (“buckyballs,” for short) prepared by laser were extremely small. The evidence for the structure would remain sketchy until C60 could be prepared in larger quantities. Such a preparation was discovered in 1990. In this method, a water-cooled cylinder contains a sharp graphite rod touching a graphite disk. The cylinder is evacuated to a pressure of 1 × 10-5 torr, and a current of 100 to 200 ampere is passed between the rod and the disk. This produces a soot that deposits on the walls of the cylinder. The soot is washed with toluene, producing a red-brown solution. When this solution is evaporated, it leaves a residue with a mass of about 10% of the original soot and containing more than 85% C60. With this method, about 1 gram of C60 can be produced in a day.
A whole new chemistry has developed in which fullerene molecules are manipulated to form compounds. Because the C60 sphere is hollow, other atoms can be trapped within it. When a graphite sheet soaked in LaCl3 solution is subjected to vaporization-condensation experiments, a substance with formula LaC60 is formed. When other metal salts are used, the ball of carbon atoms can be shrunken with laser pulses to fit the metal ion within. In this way, CsC48 and KC44 were formed. Other experiments have produced new materials with C60. For example, C60 doped with potassium is a superconductor below 18 Kelvin. In the C60 structure, other atoms have been substituted for the carbon atoms, producing derivatives such as C59N and C57B3. C60 has also been used to produce three-dimensional polymers. In addition, tubes of carbon atoms called nanotubes have also been made. In 1996, Harold Kroto, Richard Smalley, and Robert Curl shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their discovery of buckminsterfullerene.
http://scifun.chem.wisc.edu/chemweek/buckball/buckball.html
Houdini
10-31-2005, 09:22 PM
A buddy of mine from college once told me that he, as a high school student, phoned Dr. Smalley asking how to make buckyballs. He said Smalley was very cordial and took time to give him a thorough answer.
Sounds like he fought a tough battle for 6 years.
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