The samples for all of the experiments desribed in this thesis were synthesized at The University of Pennsylvania by J.E. Fischer and coworkers. The process by which the alkali fulleride salts are made is high temperature solid state intercalation. Such processes are familiar in the synthesis of intercalated graphite compounds, such as KC8 (a Tc = 140mK superconductor [88]). Stoichiometric quantities of high-purity oxygen-free C60 and alkali metal are weighed and sealed in a vessel, e.g. quartz tube or oxygen-free copper cell. Then the cell is subjected to a baking and annealing process (at modest temperatures C) over the course of weeks (e.g. [4]). For mixed compounds, this sometimes involves interrupting the baking process to mix or grind the material. The alkali vapour diffuses slowly into the lattice of C60 molecules, and the result is a fine black powder. Other intercalation strategies have also been developed, such as reaction of (highly explosive) alkali azide compounds with C60 or a previously intercalated C60 compound[89], and dilution of higher stoichiometric alkali fullerides with pure C60 (e.g. [46]). Samples were typically characterized by standard techniques such as x-ray diffraction and magnetization. The grain size of the powders was Å, but the x-ray linewidths give a crystalline coherence length, of 500 - 1000 Å. From magnetization measurements in the superconducting state, the shielding fraction was typically 60 %, and the Meissner fraction 10 %. For the experiments described here, typically a few hundred milligrams of the powder was sealed under 1 atmosphere of 90% Ar / 10% He. Synthesis of large single crystals of C60 intercalation compounds has proven quite difficult, but recently, a crystal with mass in the order of 100mg has been made.[90]