From Cubes to Dice: Solvent-Regulated Morphology Engineering of Endohedral Fullerene Microcrystals with Anomalous Photoluminescence Enhancement

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2019 Aug 12;58(33):11350-11354. doi: 10.1002/anie.201905151. Epub 2019 Jul 3.

Abstract

Despite recent successes in preparing three-dimensional crystals of empty fullerenes, such as C60 and C70 , 3D endohedral fullerene crystals, and especially hollow nanostructures, have been scarcely reported. A universal approach has now been developed to prepare shape-tunable 3D crystals of several metal nitride clusterfullerenes, including cubes and dice (hollow cubes with holes at the center of each face), which can be readily switched by changing the volume ratio of good (mesitylene) and poor (isopropanol) solvents. Synchrotron-based soft X-ray nano-computed tomography was used to unambiguously identify the interior microstructure of the dice-shaped crystals of Tb3 N@C80 , and especially the depth of the hole at each face, confirming that the dice has a solid center and the holes are not interconnected. Owing to the enhanced light absorption, the dice-shaped crystals exhibit enhanced photoluminescence relative to that of the cubes.

Keywords: clusterfullerenes; endohedral fullerenes; interfacial precipitation; metal nitrides; photoluminescence.