Creation of Jupiter Interior, a step towards Room Temperature Superconductivity

Spread the love
Laser-heated diamond anvil cell (LHDAC)?A? and a pair of diamonds (for jewels)?B?. ?A, B?can generate high-temperature and high-pressure condition such as earth interior within the laboratory by placing the sample between the diamonds for laser-heating at high pressures. Credit: Image courtesy of Osaka University

Laser-heat diamond-anvil cell (A), and anvil in the cell (B) We can create the pressure-temperature condition of the earth core by laser-heating the compressed sample in the cell. Credit: Image courtesy of Osaka University

In recent years, hydrogen’s behavior at high temperature and high pressure has been in the realm of interest not only for planetary science, but also for materials science to achieve a hydrogen energy society. Since hydrogen is both a highly diffusive and highly reactive element, it is difficult to maintain its stability in high-temperature, high-pressure equipment for use in experimentation, which has greatly impeded research on high temperature, high pressure hydrogen. A research group has successfully developed technology which stabilizes hydrogen in a high-temp, high-pressure environment without chemical reactions with surrounding matter.

 Phase diagram of dense hydrogen.

Phase diagram of dense hydrogen.

Prof Katsuya Shimizu and Lecturer Kenji Ohta in collaboration with the Japan Synchrotron Radiation Research Institute investigated the phase transformation of hot dense fluid hydrogen using static high-pressure laser-heating experiments in a diamond anvil cell. The results showed anomalies in heating efficiency that are likely to be attributed to the phase transition from a diatomic to monoatomic fluid hydrogen (plasma phase transition) in the pressure range between 82 and 106 GPa. This study imposes tighter constraints on the location of the hydrogen plasma phase transition boundary and suggests higher critical point than that predicted by the theoretical calculations.

The observed plasma phase transition of high-temperature, high-density hydrogen fluid may be strongly related to insulator-metal transition, and these results may lead to the clarification of the internal structure and magnetic field of gas planets primarily made up of hydrogen, such as Jupiter and Saturn. Also the clarification of the correlation between temperature and pressure in hydrogen will lead to the synthesis of a solid metallic hydrogen in which superconducting transition is expected to take place at a relatively high temperature, or nearly room temperature. http://resou.osaka-u.ac.jp/en/research/20151110_1?cl=en&set_language=en