Vaughan G B, Heiey P A, Luzzi D E, Ricketts-Foot D A, McGhie A R, Fischer J E, Hui Y W, Smith A L, Cox D E, Romanow W J, Allen B H, Coustel N, McCauley J P, Smith A B
Science. 1991 Nov 29;254(5036):1350-3. doi: 10.1126/science.254.5036.1350.
The high-temperature structure of solvent-free C(70) has been determined with high-resolution x-ray powder difraction and electron microscopy. Samples crystallized from solution form hexagonal close-packed crystals that retain an appreciable amount of residual toluene, even after prolonged heating. Samples prepared by sublimation, which contain no detectable solvent, are primarily face-centered cubic with some admixture of a hexagonal phase. The relative volume of the hexagonal phase can be further reduced by annealing. The structures of both phases are described by a model of complete orientational disorder. The cubic phase contains an appreciable density of stacking faults along the [111] direction.