We report β-detected nuclear magnetic resonance of ultra-dilute
8Li+ implanted in highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG). The
absence of motional narrowing and diffusional spin-lattice relaxation implies
Li+ is not appreciably mobile up to 400 K, in sharp contrast to the highly
lithiated stage compounds. However, the relaxation is remarkably fast and
persists down to cryogenic temperatures. Ruling out extrinsic paramagnetic
impurities and intrinsic ferromagnetism, we conclude the relaxation is due to
paramagnetic centers correlated with implantation. While the resulting effects
are not consistent with a Kondo impurity, they also differ from free
paramagnetic centers, and we suggest that a resonant scattering approach may
account for much of the observed phenomenology