Login / Signup

High-temperature superconductivity on the verge of a structural instability in lanthanum superhydride.

Dan SunVasily S MinkovShirin MozaffariYing SunYanming MaStella CharitonVitali B PrakapenkaMikhail I EremetsLuis BalicasFedor Fedorovich Balakirev
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
The possibility of high, room-temperature superconductivity was predicted for metallic hydrogen in the 1960s. However, metallization and superconductivity of hydrogen are yet to be unambiguously demonstrated and may require pressures as high as 5 million atmospheres. Rare earth based "superhydrides", such as LaH10, can be considered as a close approximation of metallic hydrogen even though they form at moderately lower pressures. In superhydrides the predominance of H-H metallic bonds and high superconducting transition temperatures bear the hallmarks of metallic hydrogen. Still, experimental studies revealing the key factors controlling their superconductivity are scarce. Here, we report the pressure and magnetic field dependence of the superconducting order observed in LaH10. We determine that the high-symmetry high-temperature superconducting Fm-3m phase of LaH10 can be stabilized at substantially lower pressures than previously thought. We find a remarkable correlation between superconductivity and a structural instability indicating that lattice vibrations, responsible for the monoclinic structural distortions in LaH10, strongly affect the superconducting coupling.
Keyphrases
  • high temperature
  • room temperature
  • ionic liquid