Figure 1 - Soccer Ball |
In 1985 scientists discovered that carbon (C60) had a new existing form. If you look at a soccer ball (see figure 1), it is composed of two shapes; hexagons and pentagons. This is similar to the structure of buckminsterfullerene. Sixty carbon atoms make up this spherical shape with a carbon
Figure 2 - Buckminsterfullerene |
To answer why it has such a long and unusual name there are two reasons, first, it is named after Richard Buckminster Fuller, an American architect who simplified the geodesic dome which links to the shape of buckyballs. And second, a 'fullerene' is just the name given to a molecule of carbon in either a hollow sphere, tube or many other different shapes.
Interestingly enough, since C60 was discovered there has since been many more carbon molecules made, there is now also C70, C76 and C84 (France, 2014).