Near room temperature superconductivity in superhydrides at megabar pressures

 · Invited

Abstract

Recent predictions and experimental observations of high Tc superconductivity in hydrogen-rich materials at very high pressures are driving the search for superconductivity in the vicinity of room temperature. We confirmed the existence of a new class of such materials – superhydrides (MHx, with x > 6) – and developed preparation techniques for their syntheses and characterization, including measurements of structural and transport properties, at megabar pressures. Four-probe electrical transport measurements of lanthanum superhydride samples display signatures of superconductivity at temperatures ranging from 150 K to above 280 K near 200 GPa. The experiments are supported by pseudo-four probe conductivity measurements, critical current determinations, low-temperature x-ray diffraction, and magnetic susceptibility measurements. These measurements of near-room temperature superconductivity are in good agreement with density functional and BCS theory-based calculations.

*This work was made possible by M. Somayazulu, M. Ahart, V. V. Struzhkin, Z. M. Geballe, A. K. Mishra, M. Baldini, Y. Meng, Hanyu Liu, and Ivan I. Naumov. This research was supported by EFree, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by DOE, Office of Science (DE-SC0001057). Instrumentation and facilities were supported by DOE/BES (DE-FG02-99ER45775; DE-AC02-06CH11357, ANL), DOE/NNSA (DE-NA-0002006, CDAC; DE-NA0001974, HPCAT), and NSF (DMR-1809783).

Presenters

  • Russell Hemley

    • School of Engineering and Applied Science, The George Washington University

Authors

  • Russell Hemley

    • School of Engineering and Applied Science, The George Washington University