New insight on superconductors
An important advance in understanding how the electrons in some materials become superconducting has been made by researchers from UC Davis, the Los Alamos National Laboratory and UC Irvine. The work, published July 31 in the journal Nature, could lead to a deeper understanding of superconductivity and to new materials that are superconducting at higher temperatures. The team of researchers, led by Yi-feng Yang, a postdoctoral fellow at UC Davis, found a simple way to calculate the temperature at which a new state of matter, the Kondo liquid, emerges in the class of metal alloys called heavy-electron materials. At very low temperatures, these alloys can become superconductors that conduct electricity without resistance.
"We've found a framing concept for an important class of materials, which allows us to begin to understand how they relate to each other and perhaps to find new members of the group," said Yang's postdoctoral mentor and team member, David Pines, distinguished professor of physics at UC Davis and co-director of ICAM, the Institute for Complex Adaptive Matter.
Heavy electron materials are alloys of metals such as cerium, ytterbium and uranium. They contain both free-moving electrons that make them electrical conductors and a "Kondo" lattice of localized electrons. When the temperature of the material is lowered below a characteristic temperature, the localized electrons lose their magnetism as they become collectively "entangled" through quantum mechanical effects with the conduction electrons, which become heavy and form the Kondo liquid. At much lower temperatures these heavy electrons then become either magnetic or superconducting.
Yang received a fellowship from ICAM that enabled him to become "embedded" in an experimental group on heavy electron materials led by Joe D. Thompson at Los Alamos. With Thompson and Han-oh Lee at Los Alamos, and Zachary Fisk at UC Irvine, he reviewed 30 years of existing data on heavy-electron materials, plus new experimental data collected by Thompson and Lee, to establish a long-sought connection between single impurities and lattice behavior in these materials.
They found that the crucial temperature at which the Kondo liquid emerges depends in a remarkably simple way on the coupling of individual local spins to the conduction electrons, Pines said.
The discovery should help researchers find the organizing principles of heavy-electron superconductivity, because it clarifies the nature of the normal state out of which superconductivity emerges, Pines said.
Source: University of California - Davis
Related
- Los Alamos scientists see new mechanism for superconductivityFri, 21 Nov 2008, 13:43:57 EST
- Getting warmer: UT Knoxville researchers uncover information on new superconductorsWed, 28 May 2008, 13:28:51 EDT
- Pinning down superconductivity to a single layerThu, 29 Oct 2009, 14:38:41 EDT
- Electron pairs precede high-temperature superconductivityWed, 5 Nov 2008, 13:23:10 EST
- Disappearing superconductivity reappears -- in 2-DTue, 2 Dec 2008, 10:02:29 EST
Other sources
- New Insight On Superconductorsfrom Science DailyThu, 31 Jul 2008, 21:28:15 EDT
- New insight on superconductorsfrom Science CentricThu, 31 Jul 2008, 11:49:15 EDT
- Scientists Shed Light on Heavy Electrons, Suggest New View of Superconductivityfrom PhysorgWed, 30 Jul 2008, 15:28:22 EDT
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox!Learn more about
Popular science news articles
- Elsevier celebrates the 20th anniversary of the UN Convention for the Rights of the Child
- Simple blood test could reduce repeat breast MRI scans in premenopausal women with irregular periods
- Chest ultrasound as useful as chest CT in the eval of pediatric patients with complicated pneumonia
- ESC to give talks on diabetes in 3 cities in China
- Milestone biodefense publication by Elsevier journal Vaccine
- NIST demonstrates 'universal' programmable quantum processor
- Transcendental Meditation helped heart disease patients lower cardiac disease risks by 50 percent
- Nanoparticles used in common household items caused genetic damage in mice
- Boehringer Ingelheim announces Phase III data of flibanserin in pre-menopausal women with HSDD
- Heart disease found in Egyptian mummies
- African desert rift confirmed as new ocean in the making
- 1 shot of gene therapy and children with congenital blindness can now see
- Scientists discover influenza's Achilles heel: Antioxidants
- Cleanliness is next to godliness: New research shows clean smells promote moral behavior
- New evidence that dark chocolate helps ease emotional stress
No popular news yet
- Nanoparticles used in common household items caused genetic damage in mice
- Treatment with folic acid, vitamin B12 associated with increased risk of cancer, death
- New study links vitamin D deficiency to cardiovascular disease and death
- Continuous chest compression-CPR improved cardiac arrest survival in Arizona
- Largest gene study of childhood IBD identifies 5 new genes