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1.4.2 Pa$\bar{3}$ A3C60 Superconductors

When the smaller Na+ ion is intercalated into C60, there are two main structural differences with the previous class of A3 structures[43]. First, the cubic lattice constants, a, are smaller, e.g. the largest of this class is Na2Cs, $a \approx 14.1$Å compared to the ambient pressure K3 $a \approx 14.2$Å. Second, again because of the small Na+ ionic radius, the C60 can rotate easily to adopt energetically optimal orientations, and the structure at low temperature is orientationally ordered (space group Pa$\bar{3}$), i.e. the rocksalt structure similar to fullerite. The Pa$\bar{3}$ materials have structural phase transitions, from this oriented phase to a high temperature FCC phase where the molecules are completely orientationally disordered. These first-order structural phase transitions occur close to room temperature[44] ($T_s \approx 300$K for Na2Cs and Na2Rb). Recently, it has also been found that the C60-3 molecules in these structures polymerize (at ambient pressure for Na2Rb [45] and under modest pressure $P \le 3$kbar for Na2Cs [46]). More recent studies of the pressure dependence are reported in [47] Thus the rocksalt structure below Ts is only metastable, but the polymerization is incomplete probably because it is limited kinetically. In close analogy with the polymeric A1 structure, polymerization on Pa$\bar{3}$ A3 involves an orthorhombic distortion of the cubic lattice, and the formation of chains of closely spaced covalently bonded C60-3 ions.

The superconducting transition temperatures in the Pa$\bar{3}$ systems are low, the highest known is Na2Cs with a Tc = 12K. Tc is even more strongly dependent on the cubic lattice constant. It was initially thought that this may have been the result of the higher degree of order, but with the new discovery of the polymeric phases has complicated this interpretation. Zhu has suggested that the polymer chains may in fact be the superconducting phase, but recent evidence from the case of Na2Rb suggests that the polymer chains are not superconducting. If this is correct the strong correlation between Tc and a may be explained by a strong supression of Tc caused by partial polymerization in nominally Pa$\bar{3}$ samples.

In contrast to Rb3 and K3, the superconducting properties of the Pa$\bar{3}$ systems have not been well characterized. This may be partially because of the difficulty in making samples with reproducible values of Tc, which could also be a consequence of the metastability of the superconducting Pa$\bar{3}$ structure. The role of orientational disorder has, however, been studied theoretically[6,48]. The possibility that the electronic properties would be significantly different for the ordered Pa$\bar{3}$ structure (as predicted for instance by Mele and Erwin[48] was the original motivation for our study of Na2Cs. However, the influence of polymerization, discovered after the experiments presented here, has turned out to be more significant, see section 4.3.2.


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Next: 1.4.3 Strong-Coupling Theory of Up: 1.4 Structure and Properties AC Previous: 1.4.1 Fmm AC Superconductors