Birch reduction of C60—a new appraisal
Abstract
Contrary to a previous report that Birch reduction of C60 affords C60H36 as the principal product, laser desorption-laser photoionisation time-of-flight (L2TOF), laser desorption Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR), and liquid secondary ion mass spectrometry (LSIMS) show collectively that a mixture of polyhydrofullerenes, containing C60H18 through to C60H36 with a skewed distribution centred on C60H32 is formed, the discrepancy in results arising from the thermal lability of this mixture of polyhydrofullerenes when subjected to the elevated temperatures (>250 °C) required for mass spectroscopic studies using direct-insertion heated probes.