Influence of local fullerene orientation on the electronic properties of A3C60 compounds
Peter Matus, Henri Alloul, Gyorgy Kriza, Veronique Brouet, Philip M., Singer, Slaven Garaj, and Laszlo Forro

TL;DR
This study uses NMR spectroscopy to explore how local fullerene orientations influence the electronic properties of sodium-containing fullerene superconductors, revealing microscopic site mixing and molecular reorientations affecting their electronic behavior.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the microscopic site mixing, molecular reorientations, and their effects on electronic properties in Na2AC60 fullerene superconductors.
Findings
Identification of two distinct tetrahedral sites with different fullerene orientations.
Evidence of uncorrelated neighboring molecule orientations.
Activation energy of 3300 K for molecular reorientations.
Abstract
We have investigated sodium containing fullerene superconductors Na2AC60, A = Cs, Rb, and K, by Na-23 nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy at 7.5 T in the temperature range of 10 to 400 K. Despite the structural differences from the Rb3C60 class of fullerene superconductors, in these compounds the NMR line of the tetrahedrally coordinated alkali nuclei also splits into two lines (T and T') at low temperature. In Na2CsC60 the splitting occurs at 170 K; in the quenched cubic phase of Na2RbC60 and Na2KC60 we observe split lines at 80 K. Detailed investigations of the spectrum, spin-spin and spin-lattice relaxation as well as spin-echo double resonance (SEDOR) in Na2CsC60 we show that these two different tetrahedral sites are mixed on a microscopic scale. The T and T' sites differ in the orientation of first-neighbor C60 molecules. We present evidence that the orientations of…
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