Phase Boundaries, Isotope Effect and Superconductivity of Lithium Under Hydrostatic Conditions
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
The large lattice dynamics of lithium, driven by its low atomic mass, result in energetically similar structures and significant isotope effects under pressure, posing challenges to current theoretical models. Above 20 GPa and at low temperatures, lithium's electronic properties deviate from simple metallic behavior, with superconductivity emerging in a complex, pressure-dependent manner alongside an unusual isotope effect. The structural phases of ⁷Li under these conditions are inconsistent across studies, and the structures of ⁶Li remain unexamined. These gaps limit our understanding of the effects of pressure on lithium's electronic properties and the role of quantum lattice effects in its structural behavior under pressure. Here, we integrate experimental and theoretical approaches to investigate low-temperature structural phase boundaries in lithium isotopes. We map the structural phase diagram of ⁷Li from 5 to 55 GPa and 15–75 K, identifying the sequence fcc → hR1 → cI16. A pronounced isotope effect is observed, with ⁶Li shifting the fcc → hR1 phase boundary to lower pressures at 15 K. Density functional theory calculations further clarify how these structural changes affect superconducting properties, particularly emphasizing the role of the fcc→hR1 transition in lithium's superconductivity. Our findings offer new insights into the unique behaviors of lithium isotopes under pressure.
*Funding for this research was provided by the National Science Foundation (Awards PHY-2020249 and DMR-2136038), with calculations conducted at SUNY Buffalo's Center for Computational Research. Experimental work at the University of Utah was supported by NSF Award No. 2132692 and the DOE Office of Science (Award No. DE-SC0020340). Student travel for experiments at Argonne National Laboratory was partially funded by the University of Utah's Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program, NSF Award #1950409, and the Physics & Astronomy SURP. Experiments were conducted at HPCAT (Sector 16) at APS, Argonne National Laboratory, supported by DOE-NNSA. APS is a DOE Office of Science User Facility, operated by Argonne National Laboratory under contract DE-AC02-06CH11357.
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Publication:Racioppi, S., Saffarian-Deemyad, I., Holle, W., Belli, F., Ferry, R., Kenney-Benson, C., ... & Deemyad, S. (2023). Phase boundaries, isotope effect and superconductivity of lithium under hydrostatic conditions. arXiv preprint arXiv:2312.17498.