The high-pressure treatment of C60 in an H2 atmosphere at high temperatures leads to the efficient formation of a covalently bound dimer and some oligomeric species. The resulting hydrogenated C120 is an example of the bulk production of covalently bound derivatized fullerene cores. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization in conjunction with reflectron time-of-flight mass spectrometry has been applied to the product analysis. The dissociation pattern of selected C120H(2x)+ ions (x > 30) indicates the dimeric structure of (C60H(x))2, as opposed to a giant hydrofullerene species possessing a fused C120 core. However, the results also clearly indicate a much stronger bonding (multiple sigma bonding) between the C60H(x) units than present in cycloaddition products. Evidence of a covalently linked dimer was obtained in labeling experiments, on the basis of which any laser-induced gas-phase aggregation of the C60H(x) monomer during the analysis is discounted.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp0517302DOI Listing

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