Turning hydrogen into graphene

(Nanowerk News) New work from Carnegie's Ivan Naumov and Russell Hemley delves into the chemistry underlying some surprising recent observations about hydrogen and reveals remarkable parallels between hydrogen and graphene under extreme pressures. Their work is the cover story in the December issue of Accounts of Chemical Research ("Aromaticity, Closed-Shell Effects, and Metallization of Hydrogen").
Hydrogen is the most-abundant element in the cosmos. With only a single electron per atom, it is deceptively simple. As a result, hydrogen has been a testing ground for theories of the chemical bond since the birth of quantum mechanics a century ago. Understanding the nature of chemical bonding in extreme environments is crucial for expanding our understanding of matter over the broad range of conditions found in the universe.
Observing hydrogen’s behavior under very high pressures has been a great challenge for researchers. But recently teams have been able to observe that at pressures of 2-to-3.5 million times normal atmospheric pressure it transforms into an unexpected structure consisting of layered sheets, rather than a close-packed metal as had been predicted many years ago. These hydrogen sheets resemble the carbon compound graphene. Graphene's layers are each constructed of a honeycomb structure made of six-atom carbon rings. This conventional “carbon graphene" has unusual electronic properties that are revolutionizing advanced technology.
The new work from Naumov and Hemley shows that the stability of the unusual hydrogen structure arises from the intrinsic stability of its hydrogen rings. These rings form because of aromaticity which is well understood in carbon containing-molecules such as benzene, as well as in graphene. In each of these aromatic structures, electrons delocalize through the ring to increase stability. Naumov and Hemley’s study indicates that hydrogen becomes a dark, poorly conducting metal like graphite instead of a conventional shiny metal and a good conductor, as was originally predicted over many decades of study.
Though the discovery of the graphene character of dense hydrogen has come as a surprise to many, chemists thirty years ago – before the discovery of graphene – predicted the structure based on simple chemical considerations. Their work is validated and extended by new findings. The group's results indicate that chemical bonding occurs over a much broader range of conditions than people had previously considered. However, the structural effects of that chemical bonding under conditions can be very different than that observed under the ordinary conditions that are familiar to us.
Source: Carnegie Institution for Science