Some News On Superconductors
Posted: Wed Dec 24, 2008 4:29 pm
This one from 2001 is on MgB.
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=goo ... -make-magn
And here is a recent one on iron based superconductors:
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=iro ... rconductor
Interesting times.
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=goo ... -make-magn
That is bad because MgB made with B11 is a prime prospect for a superconductor with high neutron resistance.Ray Osborne and colleagues at Argonne National Laboratories reported in the July 2nd PRL that electrons zipping past boron atoms in MgB2 quite easily "pluck" the crystal lattice, like a guitar string. The resulting vibration allows two electrons to form a so-called Cooper pair, which then travels resistance-free through the material. Another account in today's PRL from Jeff Lynn and Taner Yildirim at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and their colleagues confirms the earlier work. They further show just how perfectly coupled the lattice vibration is to the conducting electrons. The timing is so perfect, in fact, that the scientists say it will be hard to tweak the material to raise its superconducting temperature any higher.
And here is a recent one on iron based superconductors:
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=iro ... rconductor
So far the highest recorded SC field is 100 T. And the highest SC temp. (not in bulk material) is around 180K. Of course not in the same material.On the other hand, the spin fluctuations that could glue together cuprate electrons might not be enough for those in the iron-based materials. Instead orbital fluctuations—or variations in the location of electrons around atoms—might also prove crucial, Haule speculates. In essence, the iron-based materials give more freedom to electrons than cuprates do when it comes to how electrons circle around atoms.
Orbital fluctuations might play important roles in other unconventional superconductors as well, such as ones based on uranium or cobalt, which operate closer to absolute zero, Haule conjectures. Because the iron-based superconductors work at higher temperatures, such fluctuations may be easier to research.
Besides illuminating the theoretical underpinnings of superconductivity, the discovery “makes us ask if there are other high-temperature superconductors we haven’t found yet in unexpected places and if there are even higher temperatures these can work at,” remarks theoretical physicist David Pines of the University of California, Davis, who is also founding director of the Institute for Complex Adaptive Matter. In trying to boost the critical temperature, experiments should focus not only on swapping in other elements but also on layering the compounds. That should improve them just as it does for cuprate superconductors, Haule thinks.
Interesting times.