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Microscopic theory of colour in lutetium hydride

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

AbstractNitrogen-doped lutetium hydride has recently been proposed as a near-ambient-conditions superconductor. Interestingly, the sample transforms from blue to pink to red as a function of pressure, but only the pink phase is claimed to be superconducting. Subsequent experimental studies have failed to reproduce the superconductivity, but have observed pressure-driven colour changes including blue, pink, red, violet, and orange. However, discrepancies exist among these experiments regarding the sequence and pressure at which these colour changes occur. Given the claimed relationship between colour and superconductivity, understanding colour changes in nitrogen-doped lutetium hydride may hold the key to clarifying the possible superconductivity in this compound. Here, we present a full microscopic theory of colour in lutetium hydride, revealing that hydrogen-deficient LuH2is the only phase which exhibits colour changes under pressure consistent with experimental reports, with a sequence blue-violet-pink-red-orange. The concentration of hydrogen vacancies controls the precise sequence and pressure of colour changes, rationalising seemingly contradictory experiments. Nitrogen doping also modifies the colour of LuH2but it plays a secondary role compared to hydrogen vacancies. Therefore, we propose hydrogen-deficient LuH2as the key phase for exploring the superconductivity claim in the lutetium-hydrogen system. Finally, we find no phonon-mediated superconductivity near room temperature in the pink phase.

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Acknowledgements: S.-W.K. and B.M. are supported by a UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship [MR/V023926/1]. B.M. also acknowledges support from the Gianna Angelopoulos Programme for Science, Technology, and Innovation, and from the Winton Programme for the Physics of Sustainability. G.L.P. acknowledges funding from the Ministry of Research, Innovation, and Digitalisation within Program 1-Development of National Research and Development System, Subprogram 1.2-Institutional Performance-RDI Excellence Funding Projects, under contract no. 10PFE/2021. The computational resources were provided by the Cambridge Tier-2 system operated by the University of Cambridge Research Computing Service and funded by EPSRC [EP/P020259/1], by the UK National Supercomputing Service ARCHER2, for which access was obtained via the UKCP consortium and funded by EPSRC [EP/X035891/1], and by the SCARF cluster of the STFC Scientific Computing Department.

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Journal Title

Nature Communications

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Journal ISSN

2041-1723

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14

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Sponsorship
RCUK | Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) (EP/P020259/1)
RCUK | Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) (EP/X035891/1)

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