The two previous posts have explored one of the oldest bonding rules (pre-dating quantum mechanics), which postulated that filled valence shells in atoms forming molecules follow the magic numbers 2, 8, 18 and 32. Of the 59,025,533 molecules documented at the instant I write this post, only one example is claimed for the 32-electron class. Here I suggest another, Nobelocene (one which given the radioactive instability of nobelium, is unlikely to be ever confirmed experimentally!)
Nobelium has the electronic configuration [Rn].5f14.7s2 , which means the 6d and 7p shells are still empty. Filling these would take 10+6 electrons, or four more electrons (20) if one starts from No4+, resulting in a complete 32-electron filled shell for the Nobelium. These twenty electrons could be provided by two cyclo-octatetraenyl (COT) dianion ligands. Nobelium, with its nuclear charge of +102, has highly relativistic inner-shell electrons, and so special techniques must be used to model this. Here I have used a SARC all electron relativistically contracted basis set (DOI: 10.1021/ct100736b), to be used with the Douglas−Kroll−Hess scalar relativistic Hamiltonian (for details, see here). The QTAIM analysis is shown below (quite a spider’s web):

Nobelocene. AIM analysis. Click for 3D.

ELF analysis for Nobelocene.

Molecular orbital for nobelocene. Click for 3D.