Superconductors are the Holy Grail of energy efficiency.
These materials allow electric current to flow freely without resistance. But that generally only happens at temperatures within a few degrees of absolute zero (minus 459 degrees Fahrenheit), making them difficult to deploy today. However, if the power of superconductivity could be harnessed at room temperature, that could transform how energy is produced, stored, distributed, and used around the globe.
In a recent breakthrough, scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory got one step closer to understanding how to make that possible. The research, led by physicist Ivan Bozovic, involves a class of compounds called cuprates, which contain layers of copper and oxygen atoms.
Under the right conditions — which, right now, include ultra-chilly temperatures — electrical current flows freely through these cuprate superconductors without encountering any "roadblocks" along the way. That means none of the electrical energy they're carrying gets converted to heat. The heat loss of a non-superconducting material is evident when resting a laptop computer on your lap.
Creating the right conditions for superconductivity in cuprates also involves adding other chemical elements such as strontium. Somehow, adding those atoms and chilling the material causes electrons — which normally repel one another — to pair up and effortlessly move together through the material. What makes cuprates so special is that they can achieve this "magical" state of matter at temperatures a hundred degrees or more above those required by standard superconductors. That makes them promising for real-world, energy-saving applications.
These materials wouldn't require any cooling, so they'd be relatively easy and inexpensive to incorporate into everyday applications. Picture power grids that never lose energy, more affordable mag-lev train systems, cheaper medical imaging machines like MRI scanners, and smaller yet powerful supercomputers.
To figure out the mystery of "high-temperature" superconductivity in the cuprates, scientists need to understand how the electrons in these materials behave. Bozovic's team has now solved part of the mystery by determining what exactly controls the temperature at which cuprates become superconducting.
The standard theory of superconductivity says that this temperature is controlled by the strength of the electron-pairing interaction, but Bozovic's team has discovered otherwise. After 10 years of preparing and analyzing more than 2,000 samples of a cuprate with varying amounts of strontium, they found that the number of electron pairs within a given area (say, per cubic centimeter), or the density of electron pairs, controls the superconducting transition temperature. In other words, it's not the forces between objects that matter here, but the density of objects — in this case, electron pairs.
The scientists arrived at this conclusion by measuring how far a magnetic field was able to get through each sample. This distance is directly related to the density of electron pairs, and the distance differs depending on the material's properties. In superconductors, the magnetic field is mostly expelled; in metals, the magnetic field permeates. With too much strontium, the cuprate becomes more conductive because the number of mobile electrons increases. Yet the scientists found that as they added more strontium, the number of electron pairs decreased until absolutely no electrons paired up at all. At the same time, the superconducting transition temperature dropped toward zero. Bozovic and his team were quite surprised at this discovery that only a fraction of the electrons paired up, even though they all should have.
An analogous sitiation is a crowded dance hall where people — who normally wouldn't be caught arm-in-arm — begin to pair up and move in unison. Some newcomers arrive, and they too pair up and join the harmonious dance. But then something strange happens. No matter how many more people make their way to the dance floor, only a fraction of them pair, even though they are all free to do so. Eventually, nobody pairs up at all.
Why do the dancers, or electrons, pair up in the first place? Answering that question is the next step toward unlocking the mechanism of high-temperature superconductivity in the cuprates — a mystery that's been puzzling physicists for more than 30 years.
No entries found