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A Buckyegg Breaks Pentagon Rules

Roland Piquepaille writes "Chemists from Virginia and California have cooked a soup of fullerenes which produced an improbable buckyegg. The egg-shaped structure of their 'buckyballs' was a complete surprise for the researchers. In fact, they wanted to trap some atoms of terbium in a buckyball "to make compounds that could be both medically useful and well-tolerated in the body." And they obtained a buckyegg which both violates some chemistry laws and the FIFA soccer laws which were used until the last World Cup. Read more for additional references and a picture of this buckyegg carrying metal molecules."

6 of 137 comments (clear)

  1. Do not click that link at the end! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Leads to Rolands blog. He's whoring it again. Don't give him your clickthroughs.

  2. Re:Wha? by b0r1s · · Score: 5, Informative

    Definitely above the average story, but should be within the grasp of many.

    I was only confused until I realized that the Pentagon in the heading was the shape, not the structure/organization. Then it all made much, much more sense.

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  3. Direct link to story by Yetihehe · · Score: 5, Informative
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  4. Re:My understanding... by zrobotics · · Score: 3, Informative

    I recently took college chem, and if I recall correctly, 'Buckyballs' can actually be made into tubes, which have been used in some nanotech applications. Geometrically, if you were to take a soccer ball/buckyball, cut it in half along the seams, and then add in alternating rows of hexagons and pentagons, it forms a tube with hemispherical ends. It's hard to explain, but here's a link: http://www.azom.com/details.asp?ArticleID=1295 (sorry, no html).

    Considering the shape of these tubes, I wonder why an egg-shaped buckyball is so odd...it seems like a very short (i.e. 1-2 rows between the ends) buckytube would approximate an egg shape fairly well. If it is truly egg-shaped, then it isn't a buckyball at all as it isn't carbon-60, but rather is another form of carbon with an entirely different bonding pattern.

  5. Re:Am I one of the few that at least sorta underst by bladesjester · · Score: 3, Informative

    Buckyballs are made of pentegon and hexagon formations of carbon atoms (look at a soccer ball. same basic pattern). What's different here is that two of the pentagons are touching, which scientists previously thought could not happen.

    I first learned about buckyballs in my college chem classes back in 98 or 99 so I thought this article was actually pretty interesting.

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  6. Let's review the letter "S" by boyfaceddog · · Score: 3, Informative

    "pentagon rules" are rules made by the Pentagon and miscapitalized.
    "pentagon rule" is a rule about pentagon shapes.

    "Editor" is a person who knows the difference.

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