JANUARY 7, 2016
Driven by the predication of metallic hydrogen, the first and simplest element, there has been 80 years’ worth of combined theoretical and experimental effort to try to reach this predicted state in hydrogen. New breakthrough work from a team including Philip Dalladay-Simpson, and Ross T. Howie, two new scientists of HPSTAR, have carried out static compression on hydrogen and its isotopes above 380 gigapascals; higher pressure than any previous study. The work indicates another new phase, phase V, is detected in both hydrogen and hydrogen deuteride at pressures above 325 gigapascals at room temperature. Phase V could provide a glimpse of the theoretical predicated metallic hydrogen. This breakthrough discovery is published on January 07, 2016, in Nature.
The quest for metallic hydrogen at high pressures represents a longstanding problem in condensed matter physics. By now there has been more than five phases found in hydrogen since 1935, while metallic hydrogen remains illusive. Researchers continuously need to improve techniques and challenge experimental difficulties to gain even higher pressure conditions.
There are three major technical drivers in this pursuit: theoretical calculations and dynamic and static compressions. Static compression of hydrogen to very high pressure is technically very challenging. Dr. Ross Howie of HPSTAR and his colleagues from The Univeristy of Edinburgh have improved resistively heated diamond-anvil cell techniques and methods to solve hydrogen containment, enabling them to reach pressure over 300 GPa in pure hydrogen and its isotopes.
Caption: Proposed phase diagram of hydrogen up to 400 GPa.
“We speculate that phase V might be the onset of metallic hydrogen,” described in the paper,” “then it will bring out series of new questions about the current phase diagram of hydrogen”, said Ross, staff scientist of HPSTAR.