Abstract

Since the discovery of superconductivity in boron-doped diamond with a critical temperature (TC) near 4 K, great interest has been attracted in hard superconductors such as transition-metal nitrides and carbides. Here we report the new discovery of superconductivity in polycrystalline hexagonal ε-NbN synthesized at high pressure and high temperature. Direct magnetization and electrical resistivity measurements demonstrate that the superconductivity in bulk polycrystalline hexagonal ε-NbN is below ∼11.6 K, which is significantly higher than that for boron-doped diamond. The nature of superconductivity in hexagonal ε-NbN and the physical mechanism for the relatively lower TC have been addressed by the weaker bonding in the Nb-N network, the co-planarity of Nb-N layer as well as its relatively weaker electron-phonon coupling, as compared with the cubic δ-NbN counterpart. Moreover, the newly discovered ε-NbN superconductor remains stable at pressures up to ∼20 GPa and is significantly harder than cubic δ-NbN; it is as hard as sapphire, ultra-incompressible and has a high shear rigidity of 201 GPa to rival hard/superhard material γ-B (∼227 GPa). This exploration opens a new class of highly desirable materials combining the outstanding mechanical/elastic properties with superconductivity, which may be particularly attractive for its technological and engineering applications in extreme environments.

Highlights

  • Hard superconducting materials have attracted considerable interest in materials science, condensed matter physics and solid-state chemistry since the discovery of the superconductivity in superhard boron-doped diamond with a transition temperature of TC ∼ 4 K1–5

  • The synthetic specimen was free of visible microcracks with an average grain size of about 1 μm, exhibiting an equilibrated microstructure with homogeneous fine grains. (C) High resolution TEM (HRTEM) of the synthesized specimen; the corresponding observed and simulated selected area electron diffraction (SAED) patterns and the enlarged portion of the high-resolution TEM (HRTEM) image are displayed as insets. (D) Crystal structure of the hexagonal ε-NbN (P63/mmc, No 194)

  • Polycrystalline hexagonal ε-NbN bulk specimens used for the current magnetization and electrical resistivity measurements were synthesized from niobium nitride starting material (Goodfellow, claimed 99% purity) at 10 GPa and 1100∼ 1200 °C for 1.5 hour in a high-pressure multi-anvil apparatus at Stony Brook University

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Summary

Introduction

Hard superconducting materials have attracted considerable interest in materials science, condensed matter physics and solid-state chemistry since the discovery of the superconductivity in superhard boron-doped diamond with a transition temperature of TC ∼ 4 K1–5. Recent first-principles theoretical calculations of the thermodynamic properties and structural stability in NbN polymorphs[22,23] (e.g. NaCl-, NiAs- and WC-type NbN) predicted that the hexagonal-structured NbN (e.g. WC- and NiAs-type) exhibited higher hardness and lower total energy than the cubic δ-NbN. These results indicated that the hexagonal phases were more stable than the cubic counterpart which appeared to be the most energetically unfavorable structure or metastable phase with the rock-salt structure. We report the discovery of superconductivity in bulk polycrystalline hexagonal ε-NbN, and the findings of its ultra-incompressibility, high shear rigidity and hardness

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