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Fully funded PhD studentship 

 

Femtosecond Photoelectron Spectroscopy of Fullerenes 

 

Eligibility: UK and other EU nationals only. 

 

Supervisor: Prof. Eleanor Campbell, School of Chemistry, University of
Edinburgh 

([log in to unmask]) 

 

To start as soon as possible 

 

Fullerenes are nanomaterials that have properties intermediate between those
of large 

molecules and those of bulk materials. They are becoming increasingly
important as 

electron-acceptor constituents of organic solar cells and doped fullerene
crystals show the 

highest critical temperatures of any "organic" superconductors. In spite of
their 

considerable interest as new organic electronic materials, surprisingly
little is known 

about the fundamental properties of the excited electronic states of the
molecules and 

how these develop into band structure as aggregates or crystals are formed.
Evidence has 

recently been found, using scanning tunnel microscopy, for the presence of
diffuse 

hydrogenic orbitals associated with fullerenes deposited on a metal
substrate. These so-

called "superatom" states (SAMO) are distinct from the molecular s-and
p-orbitals that 

form through hybridization of the s and p orbitals on the carbon atoms.
Instead of being 

bound to individual carbon atoms the SAMOs assume the radial and angular
distributions 

of spherical harmonic functions that are defined by the central potential of
the hollow C60 

core and thus look like large, relatively simple atomic orbitals. When the
fullerene 

molecules self-assemble into chains, the diffuse orbitals are seen to
readily combine into 

delocalized bands and are predicted to play an important role in defining
the electronic 

properties of fullerene-based materials. We have recently found evidence for
the presence 

of these SAMOs in gas phase photoelectron spectroscopy of fullerenes with fs
laser 

pulses. Gas phase studies have the potential to provide more detailed
information about 

these unusual molecular states and will provide a stringent test of
theoretical predictions. 

 

This project, funded by the Leverhulme Trust, will expand on the initial
investigations to 

study the properties of SAMOs for a range of hollow fullerene-based
molecular systems 

(functionalized fullerenes, endohedral fullerenes, small carbon nanotubes).
The aim will 

be to understand how the properties of the orbitals can be tuned by
modifying the 

fullerene cage, ultimately leading to the development of materials with
specific electronic 

properties. The project will combine experiment and theory. Advanced
experimental 

techniques such as velocity map imaging photoelectron spectroscopy using
amplified, 

wavelength-tunable fs laser pulses will be used to probe the properties of
the SAMO 

excited states. The experimental work will be complemented by theoretical
calculations 

of photoelectron angular distributions using time-dependent density
functional theory. 

 

You should have, or be expecting to achieve, a first or upper second class
Honours 

degree, or equivalent, in chemistry, physics or chemical physics. 

 

Please address informal enquiries to Prof. Campbell. For the formal
application 

procedure see: www.chem.ed.ac.uk/studying/postgraduate_research/apply.html. 

 

 




--

Dr J. Olof Johansson

 

The University of Edinburgh | School of Chemistry | Joseph Black Building

Edinburgh | EH9 3JJ | UK

 

Tel: +44(0)131 650 4914 | Fax: +44(0)131 650 6453

www.ecampbell.chem.ed.ac.uk/olof.html

 

 


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