Where am I? > Home > News > Technology

The pseudogap persists as material superconducts

Science Centric | 27 January 2009 17:56 GMT
Printable version A clip for your blog or website E-mail the story to a friend
Bookmark or share the story on your social network Vote for this article Leave a comment Decrease text size Increase text size
DON'T MISS —
Digital version of the oldest Bible available
Digital version of the oldest Bible available — [6 Jul 2009] — The surviving pages of the world's oldest biblical manuscript have been reunited digitally in a single book. Today, the famous...
New 'electronic glue' promises cheaper semiconductors
New 'electronic glue' promises cheaper semiconductors — [11 Jun 2009] — Researchers at the University of Chicago and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have developed an 'electronic glue' that...
Marcus Nanotechnology Building at Georgia Tech formally dedicated
Marcus Nanotechnology Building at Georgia Tech formally dedicated — [24 Apr 2009] — Three years after breaking ground, Georgia Tech is set to dedicate the Marcus Nanotechnology Building, one of the most ambitious...
Scientists get a grip on colliding fermions to enhance atomic clock accuracy
Scientists get a grip on colliding fermions to enhance atomic clock accuracy — [16 Apr 2009] — Physicists have measured and controlled seemingly forbidden collisions between neutral strontium atoms - a class of antisocial...
More Technology...

For nearly a century, scientists have been trying to unravel the many mysteries of superconductivity, where materials conduct electricity with zero resistance.

Among the many questions: the existence of the pseudogap, a phase that up until now was found in materials as they were cooled to temperatures above the superconducting temperature - the phase where materials superconduct.

An international research team led by Boston College Physicist Vidya Madhavan reports the pseudogap doesn't give way to superconductivity, but persists and co-exists - possibly even competes - with it, they report in the journal Physical Review Letters.

'There is a need to understand the connection between superconductivity and the pseudogap,' says Madhavan, an assistant professor of physics. 'Is the pseudogap helpful or hurtful? Does it compliment superconductivity or does it compete with it? These are the questions researchers have been asking.'

The pseudogap has been closely associated with superconductivity, the point where typically un-joinable electrons match up in perfect pairs; and has been documented to exist at temperatures just above those that give rise to superconductivity. What happens after temperatures drop further and electricity conducts without resistance has been a mystery.

A more in-depth understanding of the pseudogap could explain why some materials superconduct better than others at high temperatures - temperatures above absolute zero, or zero degrees Kelvin, according to researchers. The question has been whether this gap was a precursor to or a competitor with superconductivity.

Madhavan and her colleagues combined two investigative techniques that are typically used independently. Scanning tunnelling microscopy - or STM - allows researchers to make images and study the electronic properties of materials at the scale of single atoms. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy - or ARPES - also allows for the study of particles, but in relation to their momentum.

The duel profiles these techniques created of a ceramic high-temperature superconductor known as Bi 2201, a copper oxide, documented that the pseudogap doesn't just precede superconductivity. It continues to co-exist once the material superconducts.

'Researchers have thought that the pseudogap disappeared,' said Madhavan, who collaborated with researchers at Tohoku University, in Japan, and the Institute of Physics and National Laboratory for Condensed Matter Physics in Beijing, China. 'But both STM and ARPES show us (the pseudogap) in the superconductor state. It co-exists along with superconductivity and we think it is competing with superconductivity.'

The notion of competition implies that the pseudogap's mere presence draws electrons away from the superconductor gap. The exact nature of these competing states poses the next challenge for researchers.

'That we've shown the pseudogap co-exists raises a number of questions,' said Madhavan. 'If we didn't have the pseudogap, maybe the temperature at which materials superconduct could be higher?'

Finding materials that superconduct at higher temperatures could bring the promise of superconductivity that much closer to practical applications now prohibited by the high cost of super-cooling materials in a lab.

Source: Boston College

Education professor Michael A. Peters says universities need to embrace new online media, social networks and a culture of 'openness' as part of their pedagogy, or they risk becoming seen as anachronisms in today's hyper-connected world, (c) L. Brian StaufferIvory tower needs to adapt to online media landscape, scholar says

— 11 April 2009

Universities need to embrace new online media, social networks and a culture of 'openness' as part of their pedagogy, or they risk becoming seen as anachronisms in today's hyper-connected... — full story

A force sensor (square at the centre) ensures that robots instantaneously sense collisions. The sensor is attached to a steel plate and can be screwed onto the outer joint of the robot arm, (c) Fraunhofer ISITSensitive robots

— 6 April 2009

Robots are commonplace in production halls, but are only allowed to operate in protected areas so as not to endanger humans with their movements. A new cost-efficient, robust force... — full story

Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have discovered a new technique for provoking unusual crazing behaviour in epoxy composites. The crazing, which causes the composite to deform into a network of nanoscale pillar-like fibres that bridge together both sides of a crack and slow its growth, could lead to tougher, more durable components for aircraft and automobiles, (c) Rensselaer/KoratkarFitter frames: Nanotubes boost structural integrity of composites

— 27 March 2009

A new research discovery at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute could lead to tougher, more durable composite frames for aircraft, watercraft, and automobiles. Epoxy composites are increasingly... — full story

Silicon pyramid structures etched for two minutes using hydrogen fluoride/hydrogen peroxide/water solution. Resulting structure has roughness at the micro and nanometre scales, (c) C. P. Wong3-D surface treatment boosts solar cell efficiency

— 25 March 2009

Using two different types of chemical etching to create features at both the micron and nanometre size scales, researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have developed a surface... — full story


Popular tags in Technology: graphene · laser · nanotubes · semiconductor