Temperature and quantum anharmonic lattice effects on stability and superconductivity in lutetium trihydride.
Roman LucreziPedro P FerreiraMarkus AichhornChristoph HeilPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
In this work, we resolve conflicting experimental and theoretical findings related to the dynamical stability and superconducting properties of [Formula: see text]-LuH 3 , which was recently suggested as the parent phase harboring room-temperature superconductivity at near-ambient pressures. Including temperature and quantum anharmonic lattice effects in our calculations, we demonstrate that the theoretically predicted structural instability of the [Formula: see text] phase near ambient pressures is suppressed for temperatures above 200 K. We provide a p-T phase diagram for stability up to pressures of 6 GPa, where the required temperature for stability is reduced to T > 80 K. We also determine the superconducting critical temperature T c of [Formula: see text]-LuH 3 within the Migdal-Eliashberg formalism, using temperature- and quantum-anharmonically-corrected phonon dispersions, finding that the expected T c for electron-phonon mediated superconductivity is in the range of 50-60 K, i.e., well below the temperatures required to stabilize the lattice. When considering moderate doping based on rigidly shifting the Fermi level, T c decreases for both hole and electron doping. Our results thus provide evidence that any observed room-temperature superconductivity in pure or doped [Formula: see text]-LuH 3 , if confirmed, cannot be explained by a conventional electron-phonon mediated pairing mechanism.