Identifying Nanothread Structures with Experimental and Calculated Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
ORAL
Abstract
Well-ordered packed one-dimensional, mainly sp3, carbon nanomaterials, known as nanothreads, have recently been synthesized by slowly compressing and decompressing crystalline, solid benzene from high pressure. The atomic structure of these threads has been determined only in part. We calculated the 13C NMR chemical shifts, chemical shielding tensors and anisotropy of several axially ordered and disordered partially (degree-4) and fully (degree-6) saturated nanothreads within density functional theory and compared systematically with the experimental solid-state NMR spectra to assist in identifying the structures of the synthesized nanothreads. The results reveal that some degree-4 threads might contribute to the sp2 carbon component, and degree-6 threads with distinct carbon sites are plausible candidates of the one-dimensional carbon nanomaterial. We further narrowed down the subset of possible degree-4 and degree-6 candidates by analyzing the calculated and measured chemical shifts anisotropy and two-dimensional solid-state NMR spectra.
*This work was supported as part of the Energy Frontier Research in Extreme Environments Center, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science under award number DE-SC0001057.
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Presenters
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Tao Wang
- Pennsylvania State Univ
- Pennsylvania State University