Structural and Spectroscopic Properties of Doped and Undoped Substoichiometric Lanthanum Trihydrides
ORAL
Abstract
Hydride materials are gaining attention for their potential to achieve room-temperature superconductivity, a major scientific goal. In this study, we investigate the effects of both doping and pressure on sub-stoichiometric lanthanum hydrides (LaH3-x). These materials exhibit an intriguing insulator-to-metal transition around 250 K, which may signal hidden superconducting properties. To probe this, we synthesized both undoped LaH3-x and nitrogen-doped LaH3-xNy at Sandia National Lab and performed temperature-dependent X-ray diffraction, neutron diffraction at the SNAP beamline at ORNL, and high-pressure Raman spectroscopy. Neutron diffraction enabled us to study the hydrogen sublattice and reveal how nitrogen occupies vacancies in the structure—details that X-ray methods alone couldn’t capture.
Our initial results show that nitrogen doping has a strong impact on electronic properties, potentially stabilizing new phases that could lead to unique transport properties. By using nitrogen to introduce low Z element doping, we aim to explore the structural changes and potential for achieving superconductivity at near-ambient conditions. Alongside this, we are also studying band gap closure in LaH3-x under high pressures. These findings open exciting possibilities for both undoped and nitrogen-doped hydrides as promising candidates for superconductivity close to ambient conditions.
Our initial results show that nitrogen doping has a strong impact on electronic properties, potentially stabilizing new phases that could lead to unique transport properties. By using nitrogen to introduce low Z element doping, we aim to explore the structural changes and potential for achieving superconductivity at near-ambient conditions. Alongside this, we are also studying band gap closure in LaH3-x under high pressures. These findings open exciting possibilities for both undoped and nitrogen-doped hydrides as promising candidates for superconductivity close to ambient conditions.
–
Presenters
-
Abdul Haseeb Manayil Marathamkottil
University of Illinois at Chicago
Authors
-
Abdul Haseeb Manayil Marathamkottil
University of Illinois at Chicago
-
Mohana Shivanna
Sandia National Lab
-
Nilesh P. Salke
University of Illinois at Chicago, Universoty of Illinois Chicago
-
Christopher Ridley
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
-
Muhtar Ahart
University of Illinois Chicago
-
Bianca Haberl
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
-
Vitalie Stavila
Sandia National Lab
-
Russell J Hemley
University of Illinois at Chicago, University of Illinois Chicago, Departments of Physics, Chemistry, and Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois Chicago, Chicago, IL 60607, USA, Departments of Physics, Chemistry, and Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois Chicago