Metal-bonded perovskite lead hydride with phonon-mediated superconductivity up to 46 K under atmospheric pressure
Yong He, Juan Du, Shi-ming Liu, Chong Tian, Wen-hui Guo, Min Zhang,, Yao-hui Zhu, Hong-xia Zhong, Xinqiang Wang, Jun-jie Shi

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel lead hydride perovskite material, Pb4H, that exhibits phonon-mediated superconductivity at 46 K under atmospheric pressure, offering a practical alternative to high-pressure hydride superconductors.
Contribution
The study introduces a stable, metal-bonded perovskite lead hydride with high-temperature superconductivity at ambient pressure, diverging from traditional high-pressure hydride design strategies.
Findings
Pb4H has a $T_c$ of 46 K, significantly higher than bulk Pb.
Strong electron-phonon coupling (2.45) drives high $T_c$ in Pb4H.
Perovskite Pb4H exhibits structural stability and ductility.
Abstract
In the search for high-temperature superconductivity in hydrides, a plethora of multi-hydrogen superconductors have been theoretically predicted, and some have been synthesized experimentally under ultrahigh pressures of several hundred GPa. However, the impracticality of these high-pressure methods has been a persistent issue. In response, we propose a new approach to achieve high-temperature superconductivity under atmospheric pressure by implanting hydrogen into lead to create a stable few-hydrogen metal-bonded perovskite, PbH. This approach diverges from the popular design methodology of multi-hydrogen covalent high critical temperature () superconductors under ultrahigh pressure. By solving the anisotropic Migdal-Eliashberg (ME) equations, we demonstrate that perovskite PbH is a typical phonon-mediated superconductor with a of 46 K, which is six times higher than…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSuperconductivity in MgB2 and Alloys · High-pressure geophysics and materials · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics
