LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Low-Pressure Electrochemical Synthesis of Complex High-Pressure Superconducting Superhydrides.

Photo from wikipedia

There is great current interest in multicomponent superhydrides due to their unique quantum properties under pressure. A remarkable example is the ternary superhydride Li_{2}MgH_{16} computationally identified to have an unprecedented… Click to show full abstract

There is great current interest in multicomponent superhydrides due to their unique quantum properties under pressure. A remarkable example is the ternary superhydride Li_{2}MgH_{16} computationally identified to have an unprecedented high superconducting critical temperature T_{c} of ∼470  K at 250 GPa. However, the very high synthesis pressures required remains a significant hurdle for detailed study and potential applications. In this Letter, we evaluate the feasibility of synthesizing ternary Li-Mg superhydrides by the recently proposed pressure-potential (P^{2}) method that uniquely combines electrochemistry and applied pressure to control synthesis and stability. The results indicate that it is possible to synthesize Li-Mg superhydrides at modest pressures by applying suitable electrode potentials. Using pressure alone, no Li-Mg ternary hydrides are predicted to be thermodynamically stable, but in the presence of electrode potentials, both Li_{2}MgH_{16} and Li_{4}MgH_{24} can be stabilized at modest pressures. Three polymorphs are predicted as ground states of Li_{2}MgH_{16} below 300 GPa, with transitions at 33 and 160 GPa. The highest pressure phase is superconducting, while the two at lower pressures are not. Our findings point out the potentially important role of the P^{2} method in controlling phase stability of complex multicomponent superhydrides.

Keywords: pressure electrochemical; electrochemical synthesis; synthesis complex; low pressure; synthesis; pressure

Journal Title: Physical review letters
Year Published: 2022

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.