Superconductivity in metastable phases of phosphorus-hydride compounds under high pressure
Abstract: Hydrogen-rich compounds have been extensively studied both theoretically and experimentally in the quest for novel high-temperature superconductors. Reports on sulfur-hydride attaining metallicity under pressure and exhibiting superconductivity at temperatures as high as 200 K have spurred an intense search for room-temperature superconductors in hydride materials. Recently, compressed phosphine was reported to metallize at pressures above 45 GPa, reaching a superconducting transition temperature (T${c}$) of 100 K at 200 GPa. However, neither the exact composition nor the crystal structure of the superconducting phase have been conclusively determined. In this work the phase diagram of PH$_n$ ($n=1,2,3,4,5,6$) was extensively explored by means of {\it ab initio} crystal structure predictions using the Minima Hopping Method (MHM). The results do not support the existence of thermodynamically stable PH$_n$ compounds, which exhibit a tendency for elemental decomposition at high pressure even when vibrational contributions to the free energies are taken into account. Although the lowest energy phases of PH${1,2,3}$ display T${c}$'s comparable to experiments, it remains uncertain if the measured values of T${c}$ can be fully attributed to a phase-pure compound of PH$_n$.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.