18th Biennial Intl. Conference of the APS Topical Group on Shock Compression of Condensed Matter held in conjunction with the 24th Biennial Intl. Conference of the Intl. Association for the Advancement of High Pressure Science and Technology (AIRAPT)
Volume 58, Number 7
Sunday–Friday, July 7–12, 2013;
Seattle, Washington
Session R4: NM.3 Novel Properties II
3:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
Room: Vashon
Chair: Daniel Eakins, Imperial College London
Abstract ID: BAPS.2013.SHOCK.R4.1
Abstract: R4.00001 : Recent Studies in Electrical Transport Properties at Extreme Pressures
3:30 PM–4:00 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Takahiro Matsuoka
(Center for Quantum Science and Technology under Extreme Conditions)
High pressure plays important roles in expanding our understanding of
materials. Electrical transport properties significantly change as pressure
brings atoms and molecules close together. For example, O2, which is
insulator at ambient pressure, becomes metallic and even a superconductor
under high pressures exceeding 95 GPa [1, 2]. Recently, conductive H2 has
been reported at near around 220 GPa and room temperature [3]. On the other
hand, Li and Na have been found to become a semiconductor and an insulator
in dense conditions that ion core-valence overlap becomes significant [4,5].
The number of elemental superconductors is increasing with the development
of high-pressure techniques. Currently 22 of 52 elemental superconductors
are known to superconduct only at high pressures. In this talk we discuss
very recent experiments that revealed re-entrant metallic and
superconducting phase of Li at above 100 GPa. In addition, the simultaneous
measurement system of X-ray diffraction, Raman scattering and electrical
resistance in BL10XU/SPring-8 is presented. In order to study electrical
properties, including superconductivity in detail, and reveal underlying
physics, it is very important to observe crystal structures and electrical
resistance simultaneously at high pressures.
Li becomes a semiconductor at above 80 GPa accompanied with structural
transformation [4]. Recently we have observed experimentally that Li reverts
to a metal accompanied with oC40$\to $oC24 structural transition at 120 GPa
at 50 K. Simultaneous with re-metallization, superconductivity also
reemerges with Tc above 10 K. High electrical resistivity value and abrupt
appearance of superconductivity may indicate that Li in oC24 is a poor metal
with atypical electronic states. The present study found a phase diagram, a
semiconductor phase between superconducting phases, not previously observed
for any materials.\\[4pt]
[1] S. Desgreniers et al., J. Phys. Chem. 94, 1117 (1990).\\[0pt]
[2] K. Shimizu et al., 393, 767 (1998).\\[0pt]
[3] M. Eremets {\&} I. Troyan, Nature Phys. 10, 927 (2011).\\[0pt]
[4] T. Matsuoka {\&} K. Shimizu, Nature 458, 186 (2009).\\[0pt]
[5] Y. Ma et al., Nature 458, 182 (2009).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2013.SHOCK.R4.1