
Buckyballs were discovered in 1985 by Harry Kroto and Richard Smalley while blasting graphite with a laser. Graphite is also made up of only carbon atoms and looks like the walls of a buckyball but is a flat sheet instead of a sphere. Harry Kroto and Richard Smally noticed in their experiments that they were making a lot of molecules that had 60 carbon atoms and thought that they might be spherical but they couldn’t see them.
Later two other scientists, Wolfgang Krätschmer and Donald Huffman made some buckyballs of their own and were able to look at them with a transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and saw that the buckyballs really are spheres. Buckyballs are also related to carbon nanotubes and other molecules with different shapes that are made up of only carbon. All of these molecules are also known as fullerenes, which is why sometimes carbon nanotubes are called fullerene tubes.
