Abstract :
Single molecule magnets display fascinating quantum mechanical behavior, and may have important technological applications for information storage and quantum computation. A brief review is given of the physical properties of Mn12-acetate, one of the two prototypical molecular nanomagnets that have been most intensively investigated. Descriptions and discussions are given of the Mn12 magnetic cluster and the fundamental process of quantum tunneling of a nanoscopic spin magnetization; the distinction between thermally-assisted tunneling and pure quantum tunneling, and a study of the crossover between the two regimes; and a review of earlier investigations that suggest that the tunneling in this system is due to locally varying second-order crystal anisotropy which gives rise to a distribution of tunnel splittings. In the second part of the paper, we report results obtained by a new experimental method that confirm our earlier conclusion that the tunnel splittings in Mn12 are distributed rather than single-valued, as had been generally assumed.