Nuclear Quantum Effects Induce Metallization of Dense Solid Molecular Hydrogen
Sam Azadi, Ranber Singh, and T. D. K\"uhne

TL;DR
This study uses advanced quantum simulations to show that nuclear quantum effects and temperature induce metallization in dense solid molecular hydrogen, challenging previous structural models for high-pressure phases.
Contribution
It combines diffusion quantum Monte Carlo and path-integral molecular dynamics to accurately predict band-gap reductions and metallization due to nuclear quantum effects in high-pressure hydrogen.
Findings
Nuclear quantum effects significantly reduce band gaps.
Metallization occurs in certain hydrogen phases at high pressure.
Proposed structures do not match experimental high-pressure phases.
Abstract
We present an accurate computational study of the electronic structure and lattice dynamics of solid molecular hydrogen at high pressure. The band-gap energies of the , , and structures at pressures of 250, 300, and 350 GPa are calculated using the diffusion quantum Monte Carlo (DMC) method. The atomic configurations are obtained from ab-initio path-integral molecular dynamics (PIMD) simulations at 300 K and 300 GPa to investigate the impact of zero-point energy and temperature-induced motion of the protons including anharmonic effects. We find that finite temperature and nuclear quantum effects reduce the band-gaps substantially, leading to metallization of the and phases via band overlap; the effect on the band-gap of the structure is less pronounced. Our combined DMC-PIMD simulations predict that there are no excitonic or quasiparticle energy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh-pressure geophysics and materials · Advanced Chemical Physics Studies · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics
