No Arabic abstract
Motivated by recent discovery of yttrium-based high-temperature ternary superconducting hydrides (e.g., CaYH$_{12}$, LaYH$_{12}$, and ScYH$_{6}$), we have employed evolutionary algorithm and first-principles calculations to comprehensively examine the structural stability and superconductivity of the YMgH$_{x}$ system at high pressure. The hydrogen content $x$ and the pressure are both important factors in the stability of these candidate structures. We find that the stability of hydrogen-rich materials frequently necessitates higher pressure. For instance, the pressures to stabilize $P4/mmm$-YMgH$_{8}$ and $Cmmm$-YMgH$_{12}$ are both more than 250 GPa. Hydrogen-less materials, such as $I4_{1}/amd$-YMgH$_{2}$ and $P6_{3}/mmc$-YMgH$_{3}$, can be stable at pressures as low as 100 GPa. In addition, we find a metastable structure for YMgH$_{6}$ with the same space group as the $P4/mmm$-YMgH$_{8}$. A metastable sodalite-like face-centered cubic (FCC) structure is also found in YMgH$_{12}$. These four clathrate structures of $P4/mmm$-YMgH$_{6}$, $P4/mmm$-YMgH$_{8}$, $Cmmm$-YMgH$_{12}$, and $Fdbar{3}m$-YMgH$_{12}$ is made up of H14, H18, H24, and H24 cages, respectively, in which the H-H pair exhibits weak covalent bonding. According to phonon calculations, $P4/mmm$-YMgH$_{6}$ and $P4/mmm$-YMgH$_{8}$ require a pressure of 300 GPa to maintain dynamic stability, however $Cmmm$-YMgH$_{12}$ and $Fdbar{3}m$-YMgH$_{12}$ can maintain dynamic stability at pressures of 200 GPa and 250 GPa, respectively. Electron-phonon coupling calculations indicate that they might be potential high-temperature superconductors, with superconductivity intimately linked to the H cage structure. The sodalite structure $Fdbar{3}m$-YMgH$_{12}$ has a $T_mathrm{c}$ value of 190 K and a strong electron-phonon coupling constant of 2.18.
In this work, global search for crystal structures of ternary Mg-Sc-H hydrides (Mg$_x$Sc$_y$H$_z$) under high pressure ($100 le P le 200$ GPa) were performed using the evolutionary algorithm and first-principles calculations. Based on them, we computed the thermodynamic convex hull and pressure-dependent phase diagram of Mg$_x$Sc$_y$H$_z$ for $z/(x+y) < 4$. We have identified the stable crystal structures of four thermodynamically stable compounds with the higher hydrogen content, i.e., $Rbar{3}m$-MgScH$_{6}$, $C2/m$-Mg$_{2}$ScH$_{10}$, $Immm$-MgSc$_{2}$H$_{9}$ and $Pmbar{3}m$-Mg(ScH$_{4}$)$_{3}$. Their superconducting transition temperatures were computationally predicted by the McMillan-Allen-Dynes formula combined with first-principles phonon calculations. They were found to exhibit superconductivity; among them, $Rbar{3}m$-MgScH$_{6}$ was predicted to have the highest $T_{c}$ (i.e. 23.34 K) at 200 GPa.
A huge enhancement of the superconducting transition temperature Tc was observed in tetragonal FeSe superconductor under high pressure. The onset temperature became as high as 27 K at 1.48 GPa and the pressure coefficient showed a huge value of 9.1 K/GPa. The upper critical field Hc2 was estimated to be ~ 72 T at 1.48 GPa. Because of the high Hc2, FeSe system may be a candidate for application as superconducting wire rods. Moreover, the investigation of superconductivity on simple structured FeSe may provide important clues to the mechanism of superconductivity in iron-based superconductors.
The discovery of high-temperature conventional superconductivity in H3S with a critical temperature of Tc=203 K was followed by the recent record of Tc ~250 K in the face-centered cubic (fcc) lanthanum hydride LaH10 compound. It was realized in a new class of hydrogen-dominated compounds having a clathrate-like crystal structure in which hydrogen atoms form a 3D framework and surround a host atom of rare earth elements. Yttrium hydrides are predicted to have even higher Tc exceeding room temperature. In this paper, we synthesized and refined the crystal structure of new hydrides: YH4, YH6, and YH9 at pressures up to 237 GPa finding that YH4 crystalizes in the I4/mmm lattice, YH6 in Im-3m lattice and YH9 in P63/mmc lattice in excellent agreement with the calculations. The observed very high-temperature superconductivity is comparable to that found in fcc-LaH10: the pressure dependence of Tc for YH9 also displays a dome like shape with the highest Tc of 243 K at 201 GPa. We also observed a Tc of 227 K at 237 GPa for the YH6 phase. However, the measured Tcs are notably lower by ~30 K than predicted. Evidence for superconductivity includes the observation of zero electrical resistance, a decrease of Tc under an external magnetic field and an isotope effect. The theoretically predicted fcc YH10 with the promising highest Tc>300 K was not stabilized in our experiments under pressures up to 237 GPa.
The extremely large magnetoresistance (XMR) material LaBi was reported to become superconducting under pressure accompanying with suppressed magnetoresistance. However, the underlying mechanism is unclear. By using first-principles electronic structure calculations in combination with a semiclassical model, we have studied the electron-phonon coupling and magnetoresistance of LaBi in the pressure range from 0 to 18 GPa. Our calculations show that LaBi undergoes a structural phase transition from a face-centered cubic lattice to a primitive tetragonal lattice at $sim$7 GPa, verifying previous experimental results. Meanwhile, LaBi remains topologically nontrivial across the structural transition. Under all pressures that we have studied, the phonon-mediated mechanism based on the weak electron-phonon coupling cannot account for the observed superconductivity in LaBi, and the calculated magnetoresistance for LaBi does not show a suppression. The distinct difference between our calculations and experimental observations suggests either the existence of extra Bi impurities in the real LaBi compound or the possibility of other unknown mechanism.
In this work, we show that the same theoretical tools that successfully explain other hydrides systems under pressure seem to be at odds with the recently claimed conventional room temperature superconductivity of the carbonaceous sulfur hydride. We support our conclusions with I) the absence of a dominant low-enthalpy stoichiometry and crystal structure in the ternary phase diagram. II) Only the thermodynamics of C-doping phases appears to be marginally competing in enthalpy against H$_3$S. III) Accurate results of the transition temperature given by ab initio Migdal-Eliashberg calculations differ by more than 110 K to recently theoretical claims explaining the high-temperature superconductivity in carbonaceous-hydrogen sulfide. A novel mechanism of superconductivity or a breakdown of current theories in this system is possibly behind the disagreement.