Litcius/Paper detail

Mechanism of high-temperature superconductivity in compressed H <sub>2</sub> -molecular–type hydride

Pengye Liu, Quan Zhuang, Qiang Xu, Tian Cui, Zhao Liu

2025Science Advances10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The discovery of compressed atomic-type hydrides offers a promising avenue toward achieving room-temperature superconductivity, but it necessitates extremely high pressures to completely dissociate hydrogen molecules to release free electrons. Here, we report a remarkable finding of compressed H 2 -molecular–type hydride CaH 14 exhibiting an unusual transition temperature ( T c ) of 204.0 kelvin. The peculiarity of its electronic structure lies in the pronounced emergence of near-free electrons, which manifest metallic bonding, but molecular hydrogen fragments persist. This finding indicates that the necessary condition for superconducting transition is forming the Fermi sea with Cooper pairs rather than the monatomic hydrogen. Notably, the formation mechanism of free electrons can be effectively explained by the finite-depth potential wells model. Intriguingly, this H 2 -molecular–type hydride can downgrade the required pressure to 80 gigapascal while maintaining a high T c of 84 kelvin, well above the liquid-nitrogen temperature. Our study has established a high-temperature superconducting paradigm and opened the prospect for achieving high- T c superconductors in H 2 -molecular–type hydrides at low pressure.

Topics & Concepts

SuperconductivityMonatomic ionHydrideRoom-temperature superconductorChemical physicsHydrogenMetallic hydrogenElectronCooper pairDiamond anvil cellCondensed matter physicsFermi levelMaterials scienceChemistryHigh-temperature superconductivityPhysicsHigh pressureThermodynamicsQuantum mechanicsOrganic chemistryHigh-pressure geophysics and materialsHydrogen Storage and MaterialsAdvanced Chemical Physics Studies