Sustainable high critical temperature in a hydrocarbon superconductor
Abstract
Organic superconductors are unique materials with a crystal structure made primarily of a complex carbon based network, an element associated directly with life, which were postulated to have a high critical temperature, TC, even above room temperature, from a theoretical viewpoint. Pressure plays an essential role in the study of superconductivity in such organic materials, including creation of the first organic superconductor as well as the achievement of the highest TC of 14.2 K for charge transfer salts and 38 K for metal-doped fullerides. However, superconductivity in these organic systems is only sustainable within a very narrow pressure range (a few GPa) and is readily destroyed upon further compression. Here we report high-pressure magnetic susceptibility and structure measurements on a newly discovered superconductor, LaPhenanthrene. It is found that the application of pressure not only significantly increases TC from its ambient-pressure value of 4.8 K to 12.3 K at 18.4 GPa but also stabilizes the high TC over the entire pressure range (61 GPa) of the study. The evolution of TC with pressure is closely correlated with the angle β of the monoclinic unit cell. Both TC and β change sharply with increasing pressure initially but remain constant above 40 GPa, indicating that molecule orientation is essential to superconductivity. These behaviors can be understood in terms of pressure tuning of electron correlations, illustrating the unconventional nature of superconductivity in these hydrocarbon superconductors.
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