Issue 38, 2015

B11: a moving subnanoscale tank tread

Abstract

We present a concept that an elongated, planar boron cluster can serve as a “tank tread” at the sub-nanometer scale, a novel propulsion system for potential nanomachines. Density functional calculations at the PBE0/6-311+G* level for the global-minimum B11C2v (1A1) and B11C2v (2B2) structures along the soft in-plane rotational mode allow the identification of their corresponding B11C2v and B11C2v transition states, with small rotational energy barriers of 0.42 and 0.55 kcal mol−1, respectively. The energy barriers are refined to 0.35 and 0.60 kcal mol−1 at the single-point CCSD(T) level, suggesting that the clusters are structurally fluxional at room temperature. Molecular dynamics simulations show that B11 and B11 behave exactly like a tank tread, in which the peripheral B9 ring rotates almost freely around the B2 core. A full turn of rotation may be accomplished in around 2 ps. In contrast to molecular wheels or Wankel motors, the peripheral boron atoms in the tank tread behave as a flexible chain gliding around, rather than as a rigid wheel rotation. This finding is beyond imagination, which expands the concepts of molecular wheels and Wankel motors.

Graphical abstract: B11−: a moving subnanoscale tank tread

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Jun 2015
Accepted
22 Aug 2015
First published
15 Sep 2015

Nanoscale, 2015,7, 16054-16060

B11: a moving subnanoscale tank tread

Y. Wang, X. Zhao, Q. Chen, H. Zhai and S. Li, Nanoscale, 2015, 7, 16054 DOI: 10.1039/C5NR03732H

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