13 research outputs found
A quantum fluid of metallic hydrogen suggested by first-principles calculations
It is generally assumed that solid hydrogen will transform into a metallic
alkali-like crystal at sufficiently high pressure. However, some theoretical
models have also suggested that compressed hydrogen may form an unusual
two-component (protons and electrons) metallic fluid at low temperature, or
possibly even a zero-temperature liquid ground state. The existence of these
new states of matter is conditional on the presence of a maximum in the melting
temperature versus pressure curve (the 'melt line'). Previous measurements of
the hydrogen melt line up to pressures of 44 GPa have led to controversial
conclusions regarding the existence of this maximum. Here we report ab initio
calculations that establish the melt line up to 200 GPa. We predict that subtle
changes in the intermolecular interactions lead to a decline of the melt line
above 90 GPa. The implication is that as solid molecular hydrogen is
compressed, it transforms into a low-temperature quantum fluid before becoming
a monatomic crystal. The emerging low-temperature phase diagram of hydrogen and
its isotopes bears analogies with the familiar phases of 3He and 4He, the only
known zero-temperature liquids, but the long-range Coulombic interactions and
the large component mass ratio present in hydrogen would ensure dramatically
different propertiesComment: See related paper: cond-mat/041040