Abstract

We report a combined photoemission spectroscopy (PES) and inverse photoemission spectroscopy (IPES) study of distilled, phase pure films of C 60 and the monomeric fullerides Cs 6C 60, Cs 4C 60 and fcc RbC 60. The separation between the highest energy PES and lowest energy IPES features, which is a measure of the barrier to hopping, is 1.45 eV in Cs 4C 60 and 0.7 eV in RbC 60. This difference is large enough to explain, in a correlated electron picture, the reported differences in electronic mobility between the two stoichoimetries. From the PES-IPES energy separation, the value of the Hubbard U is estimated to be 1.5 eV in closed-shell C 60 and Cs 6C 60, while in Cs 4C 60 and RbC 60 such value is reduced to ∼1 and 0.7 eV, respectively. This trend can be only partially understood taking into account the different molecular polarizability and crystal structure of the various stoichiometries. The relatively low values found for open-shell compounds indicate that the bulk Hubbard U is smaller in open-shell fullerides than usually believed, which might help explain superconductivity and the observation of spin-singlets in odd-stoichiometry fullerides.

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