Establishing through-bond and through-space connectivity is essential to the role of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) in answering questions of molecular structure and dynamics. In NMR, it is the scalar or J-coupling interaction that signifies covalent through-bond contact, while the dipolar coupling provides throughspace distance constraints. A variety of liquid-state NMR experiments have been developed that make use of scalar and dipolar couplings to transfer magnetization between pairs of nuclear spins and establish their through-bond and through-space connectivity, respectively, via cross-peaks in 2D NMR experiments. 1 While an array of experiments for determining through-space connectivity in disordered solids has also been developed, 2 relatively few correlation experiments in solids make use of scalar couplings. 3 Scalar coupling-driven correlation in solids is essential for two reasons. First, as in liquid-state NMR, delineating through-bond and through-space connectivity is a critical step for establishing structure. Second, unlike dipolar interactions, which can average to zero under molecular motion even in the solid state, scalar couplings are relatively insensitive to global molecular dynamics and can provide for correlation and spectral assignment in situations where dipolar-driven experiments fail. This is the case for HC 60 + , where significant (anisotropic) molecular motion renders dipolardriven transfer ineffective for 13 C chemical shift correlation. To characterize the covalent bonding network in HC 60 + we introduce a novel solid-state correlation method, which is a variant of the popular double-quantum-filtered correlation spectroscopy (2QF COSY) experiment in liquids. 4 This experiment maintains the many advantages of the 2QF COSY experiment but is also robust for solids (both dynamic and rigid) and is applicable under fast (>30 kHz) magic-angle-spinning (MAS) conditions. In HC 60 + this through-bond correlation answers a significant structural question by accurately identifying the direct bond between the protonated sp 3 hybridized carbon site and the sp 2 hybridized cationic site.The 2QF COSY provides through-bond connectivity via scalar coupling-driven coherence transfer and is often the first step in establishing the spectral assignment in any liquid-state NMR investigation. An important characteristic of the 2QF COSY experiment is the purely absorptive diagonal and cross-peaks, which provide considerably better resolution than earlier versions of the COSY experiment. The original liquid-state 2QF COSY experiment is not compatible with solid-state applications as the cross-peaks, which indicate the through-bond connectivity, have an anti-phase relationship in which the doublet components (split in frequency by the scalar coupling) have opposite signs. In solids, where scalar couplings are seldom resolved even under magic-angle-spinning