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Creators/Authors contains: "Gregoryanz, Eugene"

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  1. Through laser-heated diamond anvil cell experiments, we synthesize a series of rubidium superhydrides and explore their properties with synchrotron x-ray powder diffraction and Raman spectroscopy measurements, combined with density functional theory calculations. Upon heating rubidium monohydride embedded in H 2 at a pressure of 18 GPa, we form RbH 9 I , which is stable upon decompression down to 8.7 GPa, the lowest stability pressure of any known superhydride. At 22 GPa, another polymorph, RbH 9 II is synthesised at high temperature. Unique to the Rb-H system among binary metal hydrides is that further compression does not promote the formation of polyhydrides with higher hydrogen content. Instead, heating above 87 GPa yields RbH 5 , which exhibits two polymorphs ( RbH 5 I and RbH 5 II ). All of the crystal structures comprise a complex network of quasimolecular H 2 units and H anions, with RbH 5 providing the first experimental evidence of linear H 3 anions. Published by the American Physical Society2025 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 1, 2026