Upper bounds on the highest phonon frequency and superconducting temperature from fundamental physical constants

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Abstract

Fundamental physical constants govern key effects in high-energy particle physics and astrophysics, including the stability of particles, nuclear reactions, formation and evolution of stars, synthesis of heavy nuclei and emergence of stable molecular structures. Here, we show that fundamental constants also set an upper bound for the frequency of phonons in condensed matter phases, or how rapidly an atom can vibrate in these phases. This bound is in agreement with ab initio simulations of atomic hydrogen and high-temperature hydride superconductors, and implies an upper limit to the superconducting transition temperature Tc in condensed matter. Fundamental constants set this limit to the order of 102-103 K. This range is consistent with our calculations of Tc from optimal Eliashberg functions. As a corollary, we observe that the very existence of the current research of finding Tc at and above 300 K is due to the observed values of fundamental constants. We finally discuss how fundamental constants affect the observability and operation of other effects and phenomena including phase transitions.

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Trachenko, K., Monserrat, B., Hutcheon, M., & Pickard, C. J. (2025). Upper bounds on the highest phonon frequency and superconducting temperature from fundamental physical constants. Journal of Physics Condensed Matter, 37(16). https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-648X/adbc39

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