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Superconducting properties of rare-earth boron hydrides at high pressure studied by first-principles calculations

Simin Li, Weiguo Sun, Hanyu Liu, Cheng Lü, Feng Peng

2024Physical review. B./Physical review. B15 citationsDOI

Abstract

It is a long-thought proposal that dense light-element molecular hydrides, such as diborane (${\mathrm{B}}_{2}{\mathrm{H}}_{6}$) and methane (${\mathrm{CH}}_{4}$), offer an ideal platform to search for phonon-mediated superconductors. However, these hydrides are often unstable under sufficiently high pressure, e.g., ${\mathrm{B}}_{2}{\mathrm{H}}_{6}$ decomposed into BH and ${\mathrm{H}}_{2}$ at pressures of above 153 GPa, which are unlikely to exhibit high superconductivity. Here, we find a feasible route to stabilize these light-element molecular hydrides with high superconductivity under high pressure by high-throughput structure searches and first-principles calculations. We uncover a series of stable H-rich rare-earth ($R$) metal based boron hydrides $R{\mathrm{B}}_{2}{\mathrm{H}}_{10}$ with polydiborane networks. Strikingly, ${\mathrm{YB}}_{2}{\mathrm{H}}_{10}$ is predicted to be a high-temperature superconductor with unprecedentedly critical temperature ( ${T}_{c}$ ) of up to 93 K under 150 GPa. The present findings open a route to stabilize the unstable diborane by bringing the additional $R$ metals into the lattice under high pressure, as well as tuning the superconductivity among diborane-based hydrides and other similar dense light-element molecular hydrides.

Topics & Concepts

DiboraneSuperconductivityBoronHigh pressureLattice (music)Materials scienceDiamond anvil cellRare earthCondensed matter physicsCrystallographyPhysicsChemistryThermodynamicsNuclear physicsMetallurgyAcousticsBoron and Carbon Nanomaterials ResearchHigh-pressure geophysics and materialsRare-earth and actinide compounds
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