A new record-high temperature has been achieved for superconductor’s
extraordinary materials that conduct electricity without dissipating energy.
The advance may be an important step in the long-standing quest to achieve a
room-temperature superconductor, which could cities build vastly more efficient
power grids, researchers say.
So far, superconductivity only works at very cold temperatures. And even
though this new, record-breaking temperature is still very cold, it is a
temperature naturally found on Earth's surface, the scientists added.
Superconductors are materials that conduct electricity with zero resistance
below a certain temperature. Superconductivity relies on electrons not repelling
one another as they do in ordinary materials, but instead forming delicate
couples, known as Cooper pairs, that can flow through superconductors
effortlessly. Electrons in these pairs are held together by phonons, or
vibrations of the superconductor's atoms.
For more than three decades, scientists have been trying to develop
room-temperature superconductors that don't need cumbersome, energy-sucking
super cooling.
Before now, the highest known temperatures that superconductors worked at
known as their critical temperatures were minus 220 degrees Fahrenheit (minus
140 degrees Celsius) at normal pressures, and minus 164 F (minus 109 C) at high
pressures. (High pressures often enhance superconductivity by squeezing atoms
together, which keeps heat from disrupting Cooper pairs.)
Now, researchers have achieved superconductivity at a critical temperature
of minus 94 F (minus 70 C). This is about 34 F (19 C) warmer than the coldest
known temperatures in Antarctica, said study co-lead author Mikhail Eremites, a
physicist at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Mainz, Germany.
"Even higher [temperatures], and likely room critical temperatures,
are possible," Eremets told Live Science.
The researchers noted that this record-high temperature for superconductivity
does require extreme pressures of about 200 gigapascals. "Ten gigapascals
is the pressure that is routinely achieved in industry for producing synthetic
diamonds," Eremets said. "The pressure in the center of the Earth is
360 gigapascals."
The scientists previously tried experimenting with a form of hydrogen known
as metallic hydrogen. One of the leading theories for how superconductors work,
known as BCS theory, suggests hydrogen should make a great superconductor.
Hydrogen can generate high-energy phonons and can also support strong
interactions between electrons and phonons — both of which are factors that can
reinforce Cooper pairs. However, creating a pure, stable form of metallic
hydrogen has proven extraordinarily difficult.
Instead, in this new study, Eremets and his colleagues experimented with
hydrogen sulfide, the compound that gives rotten eggs their smell. The
researchers suggested that, at a certain combination of cold temperature and
pressure, hydrogen sulfide a molecule made up of two hydrogen atoms and a
sulfur atom forms new molecules, each made of three hydrogen atoms and a sulfur
atom. This new material is essentially a sulfur-contaminated version of
metallic hydrogen, and can achieve superconductivity.
BCS theory suggests there is no limit for the temperature at which
materials could super conduct, Eremets said. "Room temperature
superconductivity is possible in the proper material," he added.
Unfortunately, "the theory does not tell directly which material is expected."
Extremely high pressures would probably make even room-temperature
superconductors impractical, Eremets said. Future research could search for
other hydrogen-rich materials that can super conduct at both relatively high
temperatures and normal pressures, he said.
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