University of Wollongong
Browse

Superconductivity in Layered van der Waals Hydrogenated Germanene at High Pressure

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 13:15 authored by Yilian Xi, Xiaoling Jing, Zhongfei Xu, Nana Liu, Yani Liu, Miao Ling Lin, Ming Yang, Ying Sun, Jincheng Zhuang, Xun Xu, Weichang Hao, Yanchun Li, Xiaodong Li, Xiangjun Wei, Ping Heng Tan, Quanjun Li, Bingbing Liu, Shi Xue Dou, Yi Du
The emergence of superconductivity in two-dimensional (2D) materials has attracted tremendous research efforts because the origins and mechanisms behind the unexpected and fascinating superconducting phenomena remain unclear. In particular, the superconductivity can survive in 2D systems even with weakened disorder and broken spatial inversion symmetry. Here, structural and superconducting transitions of 2D van der Waals (vdW) hydrogenated germanene (GeH) are observed under compression and decompression processes. GeH possesses a superconducting transition with a critical temperature (Tc) of 5.41 K at 8.39 GPa. A crystalline to amorphous transition occurs at 16.80 GPa, while superconductivity remains. An abnormal increase of Tcup to 6.11 K was observed during the decompression process, while the GeH remained in the 2D amorphous phase. A combination study of in situ high-pressure synchrotron X-ray diffraction, in situ high-pressure Raman spectroscopy, transition electron microscopy, and density functional theory simulations suggests that the superconductivity in 2D vdW GeH is attributed to the increased density of states at the Fermi level as well as the enhanced electron-phonon coupling effect under high pressure even in the form of an amorphous phase. The unique pressure-induced phase transition of GeH from 2D crystalline to 2D amorphous metal hydride provides a promising platform to study the mechanisms of amorphous hydride superconductivity.

Funding

Australian Research Council (DP170101467)

History

Journal title

Journal of the American Chemical Society

Volume

144

Issue

41

Pagination

18887-18895

Language

English

Usage metrics

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC