Superconductivity at 5 K in potassium doped phenanthrene
X. F. Wang, R. H. Liu, Z. Gui, Y. L. Xie, Y. J . Yan, J. J. Ying, X., G. Luo, X. H. Chen

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of superconductivity at 5 K in potassium-doped phenanthrene, a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, with transition temperature increasing under pressure, indicating unconventional superconductivity.
Contribution
It introduces potassium-doped phenanthrene as a new organic superconductor with a transition temperature of 5 K, expanding the class of superconducting hydrocarbons.
Findings
Superconductivity observed at 5 K in potassium-doped phenanthrene.
Transition temperature increases by 20% under 1 GPa pressure.
Superconductivity likely exhibits unconventional characteristics.
Abstract
Organic materials are believed to be potential superconductor with high transition temperature (TC). Organic superconductors mainly have two families: the quasi-one dimensional (TMTSF)2X and two dimensional (BEDT-TTF)2X (Ref. 1 and 2), in which TMTSF is tetramethyltetraselenafulvalene (C10H12Se4) and BEDT-TTF or "ET" is bis(ethylenedithio)tetrathiafulvalene (C10H8S8). One key feature of the organic superconductors is that they have {\pi}-molecular orbitals, and the {\pi}-electron can delocalize throughout the crystal giving rise to metallic conductivity due to a {\pi}-orbital overlap between adjacent molecules. The introduction of charge into C60 solids and graphites with {\pi}-electron networks by doping to realize superconductivity has been extensively reported3,4. Very recently, superconductivity in alkali-metal doped picene with {\pi}-electron networks was reported5. Here we report…
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