Icosahedral carbon particles

A simple model building exercise led to the conclusion that closed large fullerenes would have quasi-icosahedral structures.

A model of a icosahedral carbon particle
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This was initially an arts project as Sir Harry Kroto wanted to build a large fullerene structure as a sculpture. Ken McKay found details of Gomberg’s icosahedra and built the beautiful models of C240 and C540.

To Kroto's surprise, they were not spheroidal like Buckminster Fuller’s MontrΓ©al dome. All the curvature was focused around the pentagons and surfaces between them were essentially flat. This resulted in an explanation of why spheroidal carbon particles have the quasi-icosahedral structures that had been observed.

This is a great example of an arts project resulting in a science breakthrough. An unusual situation!

Ed Applewhite also explained to Harry Kroto that only the top half of the Montreal dome was a BF dome. This explained why when he visited the site a second time in the 1990s, he was unable to find a pentagonal archway.

Onion shell simulation
A model of a icosahedral carbon particle

These beautiful structures were published without accreditation in the scientific American article, 'Fullerenes', Scientific American 256, 54 (October 1991).


H W Kroto and K McKay, (1988) '', Nature volume 331, pages 328–331.

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