Physical origin of color changes in lutetium hydride under pressure

Abstract

Recently, near-ambient superconductivity was claimed in nitrogen-doped lutetium hydride (LuH3-δNε) . Unfortunately, all follow-up research still cannot find superconductivity signs in successfully synthesized lutetium dihydride (LuH2) and N-doped LuH2 xNy. However, a similar intriguing observation was the pressure-induced color changes (from blue to pink and subsequent red). The physical understanding of its origin and the correlation between the color, crystal structure, and chemical composition of Lu-H-N is still lacking. In this work, we theoretically study the optical properties of LuH2, LuH3, and some potential N-doped compounds using the first-principles calculations by considering both interband and intraband contributions. Our results show that LuH2 has an optical reflectivity peak around blue light up to 10 GPa. Under higher pressure, the reflectivity of red light gradually becomes dominant. This evolution is driven by changes in the direct band gap and the Fermi velocity of free electrons under pressure. In contrast, LuH3 exhibits gray and no color change up to 50 GPa. Furthermore, we considered different types of N-doped LuH2 and LuH3. We find that N-doped LuH2 with the substitution of a hydrogen atom at the tetrahedral position maintains the color change when the N-doping concentration is low. As the doping level increases, this trend becomes less obvious. While other N-doped structures do not show significant color change. Our results can clarify the origin of the experimental observed blue-to-red color change in lutetium hydride and also provide a further understanding of the potential N-doped lutetium dihydride.

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