1998
DOI: 10.1098/rsta.1998.0153
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Metallization of fluid hydrogen

Abstract: The electrical resistivity of liquid hydrogen has been measured at the high dynamic pressures, densities and temperatures that can be achieved with a reverberating shock wave. The resulting data are most naturally interpreted in terms of a continuous transition from a semiconducting to a metallic, largely diatomic fluid, the latter at 140 GPa, (ninefold compression) and 3000 K. While the fluid at these conditions resembles common liquid metals by the scale of its resistivity of 500 micro-ohm-cm, it differs by … Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…The unexpected compression was not incompatible with some existing theoretical predictions and models which allowed for molecular dissociation. Note that at sufficiently high pressure, the compression on the principal Hugoniot must attain the ideal gas value of 4 (Nellis, 2006a). Along the Hugoniot the system was observed, by optical reflectivity measurements (Celliers et al, 2000), to undergo a continuous insulator to metal transition in the region between 17 GPa to 50 GPa as inferred by a continuous increase in the reflectance signal (from 10% to 50%) and a saturation at higher pressures.…”
Section: Fig 11 (Color Online)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The unexpected compression was not incompatible with some existing theoretical predictions and models which allowed for molecular dissociation. Note that at sufficiently high pressure, the compression on the principal Hugoniot must attain the ideal gas value of 4 (Nellis, 2006a). Along the Hugoniot the system was observed, by optical reflectivity measurements (Celliers et al, 2000), to undergo a continuous insulator to metal transition in the region between 17 GPa to 50 GPa as inferred by a continuous increase in the reflectance signal (from 10% to 50%) and a saturation at higher pressures.…”
Section: Fig 11 (Color Online)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On active carbon with the specific surface area of 1,315 m -2 g -1 , 2 mass% hydrogen is reversibly adsorbed at a temperature of 77 K (ref. 4). On nanostructured graphitic carbon at 77 K (liquid nitrogen temperature), the reversibly adsorbed quantity of hydrogen correlates with the specific surface area of the sample.…”
Section: Hydrogen Adsorption On Solids Of Large Surface Areamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The continuously evaporated hydrogen may be catalytically burnt with air in the overpressure safety system of the container or collected again in a metal hydride. (Solid hydrogen is a molecular insulating solid; under high pressure it transforms into metallic, possibly even superconducting hydrogen 4 with T c of 200-300 ᑻC.) Cryotechniques for cooling and superinsulated low temperature storage units were developed and proven in space technology.…”
Section: Conventional Hydrogen Storagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…[39][40][41] These states are significantly off the principal Hugoniot and were achieved by using a reverberating shock wave. Since LLNL ICF targets go through this regime and previous shock experiments were done primarily on the Hugoniot, this is a major technological advance.…”
Section: B Molecular Fluidsmentioning
confidence: 99%