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Competition between superconductivity and molecularization in the quantum nuclear behavior of lanthanum hydride

Sebastiaan van de Bund, Graeme J. Ackland

2023Physical review. B./Physical review. B13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lanthanum hydride is the superconductor with the highest known critical temperature. It is believed that the superconductivity is of standard BCS type, with electrons forming Cooper pairs and opening the superconducting band gap. Here, we show that the BCS electron pairing is in competition with an alternative pairing: covalent bonding. We show that the covalent pairing is favored at lower pressures, and the superconducting cubic phase becomes unstable as pressure is reduced. Previous calculations based on static relaxation neglect three factors, all of which are important in stabilizing the cubic phase. Finite temperature plays a role, and two quantum effects are also important---the nuclear wave function contributes to destabilizing the ${\mathrm{H}}_{2}$ molecules, and the zero-point pressure means that calculated pressures are significantly overestimated by standard methods. We demonstrate these phenomena using Born-Oppenheimer and path-integral molecular dynamics: These give the same qualitative picture, with nuclear quantum effects increasing the transition pressure significantly. This competition between molecularization and superconducting gap formation is the fundamental reason why hydride superconductors have so far been found only at high pressure.

Topics & Concepts

SuperconductivityPairingCondensed matter physicsPhysicsCooper pairElectron pairElectronBCS theoryHydrideLanthanumQuantum mechanicsNuclear physicsHydrogenHigh-pressure geophysics and materialsAdvanced Chemical Physics StudiesAdvanced Condensed Matter Physics
Competition between superconductivity and molecularization in the quantum nuclear behavior of lanthanum hydride | Litcius