APS Logo

Probing superconductivity in superhydride materials using nanoscale quantum sensors

ORAL

Abstract

Tuning pressure provides an interesting playground for the exploration of novel condensed phases. Recent work probing superconductivity in hydride materials at megabar (~ 100 GPa) pressures in diamond anvil cells represents one facet of this rich landscape. Transport studies of super hydrides have consistently demonstrated a sharp drop in sample resistance at high temperatures. However, constraints on sample size, enormous pressure gradients, and complicated sample geometries are testing the limits of conventional high pressure probes of magnetism. To this end, we introduce a novel platform for magnetometry at megabar pressures with high sensitivity and diffraction-limited sub-micron spatial resolution using Nitrogen Vacancy (NV) color centers incorporated directly into the diamond culet. Through simultaneous transport and magnetic measurements, we probe the dual hallmarks of superconductivity, including the first spatially resolved measurements of the Meissner effect, in a high pressure hydride system.

Presenters

  • Prabudhya Bhattacharyya

    University of California, Berkeley

Authors

  • Prabudhya Bhattacharyya

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Wuhao Chen

    Jilin University

  • Maxwell Block

    University of California, Berkeley, Harvard University

  • Bryce H Kobrin

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Yuanqi Lyu

    UC Berkeley, University of California, Berkeley

  • Thomas Smart

    UC Berkeley

  • Zhipan Wang

    University of California, Davis

  • Satcher Hsieh

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Shubhayu Chatterjee

    UC Berkeley

  • Chong Zu

    University of California, Berkeley, Washington University in St. Louis

  • Christopher R Laumann

    Boston University

  • Viktor Struzhkin

    Carnegie Inst of Washington

  • Raymond Jeanloz

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Xiaoli Huang

    Jilin University

  • Norman Y Yao

    University of California, Berkeley, Harvard University