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Buckyballs with a Surprise

Carbon cages filled with metal molecules could improve MRI diagnostics and make high-efficiency solar cells.

By Prachi Patel

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

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Luna nanoWorks is commercializing a new kind of buckyball in which 80 carbon atoms enclose three rare-earth-metal atoms in a metal nitride complex. The molecule shows promise for enhancing MRI images and making high-efficiency solar cells, according to the company. (Credit: Robert Lenk, President, Luna nanoWorks)

A Virginia-based startup called Luna nanoWorks is nearing commercialization of a novel version of buckyballs--soccerball-shaped carbon molecules--that the company says could improve magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and lead to high-efficiency solar cells. Each buckyball is made of 80 carbon atoms with metal-nitride clusters trapped inside, creating a nanomaterial with novel electronic, optical, and magnetic properties.

The new material was first made by Harry Dorn and his colleagues at Virginia Tech, in Blacksburg, VA, by accident. Scientists typically create buckyballs--hollow spheres made of 60 carbon atoms are the most common kind--by striking an electric arc between two graphite electrodes. When the Virginia Tech researchers were making these fullerenes using metal catalyst-infused electrodes, air leaked into the electric-arc chamber. The result was a large number of 80-carbon buckyball cages, each with a metal-nitride molecule with three metal atoms trapped inside.

Researchers have enclosed metal molecules in buckyballs before, but these are the first buckyballs enclosing highly unstable metal-nitride molecules. What's more, the 80-carbon buckyball itself was unusual: no one had ever before made one, either hollow or filled. Even though the metal-nitride molecules and the 80-carbon buckyball do not exist for long on their own, they stabilize each other in the new arrangement. Luna nanoWorks, based in Danville, VA, can make the fullerenes with various combinations of rare earth metals, such as scandium, yttrium, and lanthanum.

The buckyball has a net negative charge, while the metal cluster has a net positive one. This charge distribution of the metallic fullerene molecule gives it interesting properties, which researchers are still trying to understand. "It's a very unusual material, not your run-of-the-mill compound," says James Cross, professor of chemistry at Yale University. "There could easily be various practical applications," the most promising being MRI enhancement, he says.

Luna nanoWorks, which licensed the technology from Virginia Tech, says the materials could be utilized as a more effective contrast agent in MRI, which is used to image soft body tissue such as the brain and spinal cord. Physicians currently inject gadolinium into a patient's body right before an MRI exam. The metal improves the resolution of the scans and increases the image contrast. But gadolinium is toxic, so it is wrapped with an organic compound. This does not eliminate the toxicity risk completely, Cross says, and it limits the amount of gadolinium that doctors can inject into the patient's body.

In contrast, the 80-carbon buckyball is a much stronger cage for trapping gadolinium nitride "for the next generation of contrast agents where you want to target them to a particular organ or disease condition," says Robert Lenk, Luna nanoWorks' president. Indeed, Dorn and his colleagues at Virginia Tech have shown that the metal-nitride fullerenes show 40 times better contrast than contrast agents currently on the market, although the exact mechanism behind that is not yet understood. Before the material can be used for MRI, however, it would have to undergo a battery of safety and toxicity tests, and get Food and Drug Administration approval. The company plans to do this once the material has been fully developed.

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