Observation of non-superconducting phase changes in nitrogen doped lutetium hydrides

The recent report of near-ambient superconductivity and associated color changes in pressurized nitrogen doped lutetium hydride has triggered worldwide interest and raised major questions about the nature and underlying physics of these latest claims. Here we report synthesis and characterization of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2023-09, Vol.14 (1), p.5991-9, Article 5991
Hauptverfasser: Xing, Xiangzhuo, Wang, Chao, Yu, Linchao, Xu, Jie, Zhang, Chutong, Zhang, Mengge, Huang, Song, Zhang, Xiaoran, Liu, Yunxian, Yang, Bingchao, Chen, Xin, Zhang, Yongsheng, Guo, Jiangang, Shi, Zhixiang, Ma, Yanming, Chen, Changfeng, Liu, Xiaobing
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The recent report of near-ambient superconductivity and associated color changes in pressurized nitrogen doped lutetium hydride has triggered worldwide interest and raised major questions about the nature and underlying physics of these latest claims. Here we report synthesis and characterization of high-purity nitrogen doped lutetium hydride LuH 2± x N y . We find that pressure conditions have notable effects on Lu-N and Lu-NH chemical bonding and the color changes likely stem from pressure-induced electron redistribution of nitrogen/vacancies and interaction with the LuH 2 framework. No superconducting transition is found in all the phases at temperatures 1.8-300 K and pressures 0-38 GPa. Instead, we identify a notable temperature-induced resistance anomaly of electronic origin in LuH 2± x N y , which is most pronounced in the pink phase and may have been erroneously interpreted as a sign of superconducting transition. This work establishes key benchmarks for nitrogen doped lutetium hydrides, allowing an in-depth understanding of its novel pressure-induced phase changes. Near-ambient superconductivity and pressure-driven color changes were recently reported in nitrogen-doped lutetium hydride. Here, the authors synthesize LuH 2± x N y and do not confirm the superconductivity. In addition, they find that the color changes likely stem from pressure-induced electron redistribution of nitrogen and vacancies.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-023-41777-7