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Hot Hydride Superconductivity above 550 K

Invited

Abstract

The search for room temperature (RT) superconductivity (SC) has accelerated dramatically, driven by theoretical predictions that first indicated alloying dense hydrogen with other elements could produce conventional phonon-mediated SC at very high temperatures and at accessible pressures, and then with the success of structure search methods that have identified specific candidates and pressure-temperature (P-T) conditions for synthesis. As a result, experimental studies of simple binary hydrides under pressure have yielded high critical SC transition temperatures (Tc), of 260K in LaH10, close to RT, at pressures near 180GPa. We successfully synthesized a metallic La based superhydride from La metal and NH3BH3, and find an initial multi-step transition with a Tc of 294K for the highest onset, in line with previous work[1],[2]. Subsequent thermal excursions to higher temperatures promoted a chemical reaction a ternary or higher order system, confirmed by X-ray diffraction. Although the reaction does not appear to be complete, the onset temperature was pushed from 294K to 556K. The results provide evidence for hot superconductivity well above RT, in line with recent predictions for a higher order hydride under P[3].
[1] Somayazulu et al. PRL 122 (2019).
[2] Drozdov et al. Nat. 569, 528–531 (2019).
[3] Sun, Y.et al. PRL 123 (2019)

Presenters

  • Audrey Grockowiak

    National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Tallahassee and Florida State University, NHMFL, Florida State University

Authors

  • Audrey Grockowiak

    National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Tallahassee and Florida State University, NHMFL, Florida State University

  • Muhtar Ahart

    University of Illinois at Chicago

  • Toni Helm

    HZDR

  • Gaston Garbarino

    ESRF

  • Konstantin Glazyrin

    DESY

  • William A Coniglio

    National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Tallahassee and Florida State University, NHMFL, Florida State University

  • ravhi kumar

    Department of Physics, University of Illinois at Chicago, University of Illinois at Chicago

  • Maddury S Somayazulu

    HPCAT, APS

  • Yue Meng

    HPCAT, ANL, HPCAT, APS, Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory, HPCAT, APS

  • Morgan Oliff

    NHMFL, Florida State University

  • Vaughan Williams

    NHMFL, Florida State University

  • Neil Ashcroft

    Cornell

  • Russell J Hemley

    University of Illinois at Chicago

  • Stanley W Tozer

    National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Tallahassee and Florida State University, NHMFL, Florida State University