Abstract
Molecular hydrogen forms the archetypical quantum solid. Its quantum nature is revealed by behavior which is classically impossible and by very strong isotope effects. Isotope effects between [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], and HD molecules come from mass difference and the different quantum exchange effects: fermionic [Formula: see text] molecules have antisymmetric wavefunctions, while bosonic [Formula: see text] molecules have symmetric wavefunctions, and HD molecules have no exchange symmetry. To investigate how the phase diagram depends on quantum-nuclear effects, we use high-pressure and low-temperature in situ Raman spectroscopy to map out the phase diagrams of [Formula: see text]-HD-[Formula: see text] with various isotope concentrations over a wide pressure-temperature (P-T) range. We find that mixtures of [Formula: see text], HD, and [Formula: see text] behave as an isotopic molecular alloy (ideal solution) and exhibit symmetry-breaking phase transitions between phases I and II and phase III. Surprisingly, all transitions occur at higher pressures for the alloys than either pure [Formula: see text] or [Formula: see text] This runs counter to any quantum effects based on isotope mass but can be explained by quantum trapping of high-kinetic energy states by the exchange interaction.
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