 Courtesy PNNL
Lai-Sheng Wang places a tinker-toyish thing onto a visitor's
palm. Many such toys line the Washington State University physics
professor's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory office in
Richland. The object at hand--12 steel balls hinged to red plastic
tubes twisted this way and that--form a perfectly symmetrical,
20-sided icosahedron.
Wang also displays a daughter-fashioned Father's Day card that
testifies to his paternal greatness. He spends time with the
family, washes dishes, cooks, and is always kind. Mixed in there is
a gilded item that truly separates Wang from all other pops on
earth: he fathered the gold buckyball.
The word "buckyball" derives from "Buckminsterfullerene," a
hollow cluster of 60 carbon atoms discovered by Richard Smalley at
Rice University. Wang worked with Smalley until joining WSU in
1993. He is also an affiliate senior scientist at the Department of
Energy laboratory. The "hollow gold cage," as Wang calls it, is the
official reason for today's visit, but Wang is full of
surprises.
The cluster's practical use is unknown, though gold is valued as
catalyst and component of advanced electronics. What truly excites
people is the gold's status as the first buckyball-like structure
made of metal.
Because of their tendency to clump, metals have presented a
special challenge to architects of the very small. One group in
Europe theorized that 32 atoms was the hollow-cage gold analog to
carbon 60. But Wang's team elicited what is called the
photoelectron spectra--a physical signature--of the gold 32 cluster
and found it just another compact clump.
Wang's group already knew that at 20 atoms gold assumed a 3-D
pyramid shape and that clusters of 15 atoms or fewer remained flat.
So they concentrated on the clusters between 16 and 20 and,
buttressed by theoretical calculations that tease out specific
geometry, found that all but one possible configuration of 16, 17,
and 18 atoms were open in the middle.
After they published this finding last May in Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences, the news escaped the arcane
world of materials science to engage a larger cultural
conversation. The New York Times carried a story that
prompted a Princeton mathematician, a New York playwright,
students, and other readers from all over to bombard Wang with
helpful suggestions for an original name. Wang thanked them but
resisted.
Why? Wang explains that the gold is lovely but unstable; it can
maintain its shape only while free-floating in a vacuum or
pressurized gas. It is the metal-cluster equivalent to a sickly but
adorable puppy in a pet store window that you have no intention of
buying.
Back to the toy with 12 atom-balls. Shouldn't it have 16 to 18
atoms?
No. Wang announces, "It is tin!" A second hollow metal
cluster!
Wang quietly slipped the tin findings into a chemistry journal a
month after the gold study. This cluster he actually named
"Stannaspherene," after the Latin word for "tin." After what
happened with gold, he says, he'd have felt uncomfortable making a
big deal out of this one.
Still, he can barely contain his excitement. Tin's perfect
mini-buckylike symmetry suggests it is more robust than gold at
holding its shape. And like the gold cluster, tin is more than 6
angstroms across (roughly a ten-millionth the size of a comma),
large enough to contain other metal atoms. Such configurations,
according to Wang, can act as "chemical building blocks for
cluster-assembled nanomaterials."
Time to cross the hall between Wang's office and his lab in the
sprawling W.R. Wiley Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory.
Off to one end is a large, U-shaped apparatus that performs the
photoelectron spectroscopy. Photoelectrons carry all of the
structural information, a physical-chemical fingerprint, about the
clusters from which they came.
On one side of the U is a laser that vaporizes atoms from a
metal sample affixed to a tiny drum inserted into the machine. This
creates a hot plume, tens of thousands of degrees, of distinct
atoms that are cooled by a high-pressure helium gas. The material
condenses into clusters of a few atoms to a few hundred atoms,
swept along by the helium and sorted according to how fast they
make it across the bottom of the U to the far side. There the
clusters, each with a known number of atoms, are pulsed with
another laser to shake loose their atoms' photoelectrons.
The other fork of the U is the end of the line, a 12-foot tube
Wang calls "a race track" that the photoelectrons must traverse to
reach a detector that will yield the spectra for calculating their
structure. First, though, the quarry must be coaxed along by a
strong magnetic field, or "magnetic bottle," that keeps all these
photoelectrons that have been flying off the clusters in all
directions on the race track and moving toward the detector.
Of the handful of U.S. groups performing photoelectron
spectroscopy, Wang says, "we have the best magnetic bottle, which
allows us to detect 99 percent of the electrons. Since there are so
few, we don't have the luxury of throwing any away."
Wang frequently refers to what he does as "alchemy," an
"intellectual curiosity."
"If you want to make it big," he says, "you have to make
material, come up with a sample"--something you can see in bulk,
rather than isolated clusters. "Look at the Buckyball. It's very
stable in air. Any idiot can make it--even a physicist."
A nickname might help, too. Stannaspherene? Hard sell. How about
Haleyball, for Jack Haley, the actor who played the hollow Tin Man
in The Wizard of Oz?
The alchemist will take it under advisement, maybe save the
nickname for when he puts another atom inside the cluster and gives
the Tin Man a heart.
--Bill Cannon, PNNL Media
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