Imaging magnetic flux trapping in lanthanum hydride using diamond quantum sensors
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2510.21877v1
- Date: Thu, 23 Oct 2025 14:41:58 GMT
- Title: Imaging magnetic flux trapping in lanthanum hydride using diamond quantum sensors
- Authors: Yang Chen, Junyan Wen, Ze-Xu He, Jing-Wei Fan, Xin-Yu Pan, Cheng Ji, Huiyang Gou, Xiaohui Yu, Liucheng Chen, Gang-Qin Liu,
- Abstract summary: Lanthanum hydride has attracted significant attention in recent years due to its signatures of superconductivity at around 250 K.<n>Megabar pressures required for synthesize and maintain its state present extraordinary challenges for experiments.
- Score: 5.683593937389748
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
- Abstract: Lanthanum hydride has attracted significant attention in recent years due to its signatures of superconductivity at around 250 K (1, 2). However, the megabar pressures required for synthesize and maintain its state present extraordinary challenges for experiments, particularly in characterizing its Meissner effect (3, 4). The nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in diamond has emerged as a promising quantum probe to address this problem (5-8), but a gap remains between its working pressure and the pressure required to study the superconducting state of lanthanum hydride (9-12). In this work, using neon gas as the pressure transmitting medium, the working pressure of NV centers is extended to nearly 200 GPa. This quantum probe is then applied to study the Meissner effect of a LaH$_{9.6}$ sample, synthesized by laser heating ammonia borane and lanthanum. A strong magnetic shielding effect is observed, with the transition temperature beginning at around 180 K and completing at 220 K. In addition, magnetic field imaging after field cooling reveals strong flux trapping and significant inhomogeneities within the sample. Our work provides compelling evidence for superconductivity in lanthanum hydride and highlights the importance of spatially resolved techniques in characterizing samples under ultrahigh pressure conditions.
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