The sequential carbon-carbon bond cleaving reactions of the diketone derivative of C60 with o-phenylenediamine give a novel bowl-shaped fullerene bearing a 20-membered ring orifice. The product reversibly encapsulates a water molecule into the fullerene cage for the first time.
An endohedral methane complex of a fullerene derivative is first synthesized by insertion of a methane molecule through the opening of an open-cage C(60) derivative. The trapped methane is confirmed by NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. Both methane carbon and protons show remarkable upfield shifts in NMR, characteristic of a chemical species in a fullerene cage. CH(4) protons appear as one equivalent signal in the (1)H NMR spectrum, suggesting that even methane can rotate in a C(60) cage.
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