Scientists have discovered a new form of carbon that may be even harder than diamond and has the potential for a range of mechanical, electronic, and electrochemical uses.

Researchers led by the Carnegie Institution have found a new form of carbon clusters capable of indenting diamond, which is unusual in its mix of crystalline and disordered structure.

“We created a new type of carbon material, one that is comparable to diamond in its inability to be compressed,” lead researcher, Lin Wang said.

“Once created under extreme pressures, this material can exist at normal conditions, meaning it could be used for a wide array of practical applications,” Lin Wang said in a statement.

Carbon is the fourth-most-abundant element in the universe and takes on a wide variety of forms - the honeycomb-like graphene, the pencil “lead” graphite, diamond, cylindrically structured nanotubes, and hollow spheres called fullerenes.

Some forms of carbon are crystalline, meaning that the structure is organised in repeating atomic units. Other forms are amorphous, meaning that the structure lacks the long-range order of crystals. Hybrid products that combine both crystalline and amorphous elements had not previously been observed, although scientists believed they could be created.

Lin Wang and colleagues started with a substance called carbon-60 cages, made of highly organised balls of carbon constructed of pentagon and hexagon rings bonded together to form a round, hollow shape.

An organic Xylene solvent was put into the spaces between the balls and formed a new structure. They then applied pressure to this combination of carbon cages and solvent, to see how it changed under different stresses.

At relatively low pressure, the carbon-60’s cage structure remained. But as the pressure increased, the cage structures started to collapse into more amorphous carbon clusters.

However, the amorphous clusters still occupy their original sites, forming a lattice structure.

The team discovered that there is a narrow window of pressure, about 3,20,000 times the normal atmosphere, under which this new structured carbon is created and does not bounce back to the cage structure when pressure is removed.

This is crucial for finding practical applications for the new material going forward, the study published in Science said.

This material was capable of indenting the diamond anvil used in creating the high-pressure conditions.

If the solvent used to prepare the new form of carbon is removed by heat treatment, the material loses its lattice periodicity indicating that solvent is crucial for maintaining the chemical transition that underlies the new structure.

Since there are many similar solvents, it is theoretically possible that an array of similar, but slightly different, carbon lattices could be created using this pressure method.

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