Stabilizing a hydrogen-rich superconductor at 1 GPa by the charge-transfer modulated virtual high-pressure effect
Abstract
Applying pressure around megabar is indispensable in the synthesis of high-temperature superconducting hydrides, such as SH3 and LaH10. Stabilizing the high-pressure phase of hydride around ambient condition is a severe challenge. Based on the density-functional theory calculations, we give the first example that the structure of hydride CaBH5 predicted above 280 GPa, can maintain its dynamical stability with pressure down to 1 GPa, by modulating the charge transfer from metal atoms to hydrogen atoms via the replacement of Ca with alkali metal atoms e.g. Cs, in which the [BH5]2- anion shrinks along c axis and expands in the ab plane, experiencing an anisotropic virtual high pressure. This mechanism, namely charge transfer modulated virtual high pressure effect, plays a vital role in enhancing the structural stability and leading to the reemergence of ambient-pressure-forbidden [BH5]2- anion around 1 GPa in CsBH5. Moreover, we find that CsBH5 is a strongly coupled superconductor, with transition temperature as high as 98 K, well above the liquid-nitrogen temperature. Our findings provide a novel mechanism to reduce the critical pressure required by hydrogen-rich compound without changing its crystal structure, and also shed light on searching ambient-pressure high-temperature superconductivity in metal borohydrides.
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