The realization of metallic hydrogen at ambient temperature and pressure remains one of the most compelling goals in condensed-matter physics, promising a high-temperature superconductor, a revolutionary propellant, and a window into quantum phase transitions. While static compression experiments above 400 GPa have provided tentative evidence for the metallic state, its recovery to ambient conditions has proved elusive because of the vanishingly small kinetic barriers that separate the atomic metallic phase from the molecular insulating ground state at zero pressure. Here I propose a concrete, experimentally accessible strategy—Diamond-Confined Metallic Hydrogen (DCMH)—that combines three interlocking physical mechanisms: (i) sub-nanometer confinement of hydrogen within a fully sp³-bonded diamond-like carbon matrix, which delivers chemical internal pressures sufficient to reach the metallization density; (ii) topological frustration of the molecular H₂ recombination path, raising the kinetic barrier to geological timescales; and (iii) optional resonant quantum electrodynamic (QED) vacuum engineering using a tunable optical cavity to induce vacuum-mediated spin pairing, thereby lowering the free energy of the metallic state and rendering it thermodynamically competitive at 300 K and 0 GPa. The entire procedure can be executed in existing high-pressure laboratories using multi-anvil presses, DAC gas-loading systems, and table-top cavity QED setups. I present detailed DFT-based estimates of confinement densities, kinetic barrier heights, and cavity-enhanced pairing gaps, together with a full experimental protocol for synthesis, decompression, and characterization. This roadmap transforms metallic hydrogen from a high-pressure curiosity into a designer material that can be handled at ambient conditions.
Giustino Travaglini (Sat,) studied this question.
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