Research project

Molecular Endofullerenes

Project overview

This project consists of the synthesis and multidisciplinary investigation of small molecules trapped inside fullerene cages. The host molecules in these unique molecular systems behave as quantum rotors and exhibit phenomena such as spin isomerism, spin isomer conversion, quantised molecular motion, and quantum-rotor induced hyperpolarization.

Staff

Lead researchers

Professor Malcolm Levitt

Professor of Chemistry

Research interests

  • Magnetic Resonance
  • Endofullerenes
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Other researchers

Professor Richard Whitby

Professor of Chemistry

Research interests

  • Synthesis, properties and application of atomic and molecular endofullerenes.
  • The use of flow chemistry for the rapid acquisition of mechanistic and process information.
  • The synthesis of polyaromatic molecules for optoelectronic applications.
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Collaborating research institutes, centres and groups

Research outputs

Benno Meier, Salvatore Mamone, Maria Concistrè, Javier Alonso-Valdesueiro, Andrea Krachmalnicoff, Richard Whitby & Malcolm H. Levitt, 2015, Nature Communications, 6, 1-12
Type: article
Andrea Krachmalnicoff, Richard Bounds, Salvatore Mamone, Malcolm H. Levitt, Marina Carravetta & Richard Whitby, 2015, Chemical Communications, 1-4
Type: article
Marcel Utz, Malcolm H. Levitt, Nathan Cooper & Hendrik Ulbricht, 2015, Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 17, 3867-3872
Type: article
A. Krachmalnicoff, M. Levitt & R. Whitby, 2014, Chemical Communications
Type: article
Kelvin S.K. Goh, Mónica Jiménez-Ruiz, Mark R. Johnson, Stéphane Rols, Jacques Ollivier, Mark S. Denning, Salvatore Mamone, Malcolm H. Levitt, Xuegong Lei, Yongjun Li, Nicholas J. Turro, Yasujiro Murata & Anthony J. Horsewill, 2014, Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 16(39), 21330-21339
Type: article