Viable superconducting material created at low temperature and low pressure

By University of Rochester  March 8, 2023
https://phys.org/news/2023-03-viable-superconducting-material-temperature-pressure.html


In a historic achievement, University of Rochester researchers have created a 
superconducting material at both a temperature and pressure low enough for 
practical applications.

"With this material, the dawn of ambient superconductivity and applied 
technologies has arrived," according to a team led by Ranga Dias, an assistant 
professor of mechanical engineering and physics.

In a paper in Nature, the researchers describe a nitrogen-doped lutetium 
hydride (NDLH) that exhibits superconductivity at 69 degrees Fahrenheit (20.5 
degrees Celsius) and 10 kilobars (145,000 pounds per square inch, or psi) of 
pressure.

Although 145,000 psi might still seem extraordinarily high (pressure at sea 
level is about 15 psi), strain engineering techniques routinely used in chip 
manufacturing, for example, incorporate materials held together by internal 
chemical pressures that are even higher.

Scientists have been pursuing this breakthrough in condensed matter physics for 
more than a century.

Superconducting materials have two key properties: electrical resistance 
vanishes, and the magnetic fields that are expelled pass around the 
superconducting material.

Such materials could enable:


  *   Power grids that transmit electricity without the loss of up to 200 
million megawatt hours (MWh) of the energy that now occurs due to resistance in 
the wires


  *   Frictionless, levitating high-speed trains



  *   More affordable medical imaging and scanning techniques such as MRI and 
magnetocardiography


  *   Faster, more efficient electronics for digital logic and memory device 
technology



  *   Tokamak machines that use magnetic fields to confine plasmas to achieve 
fusion as a source of unlimited power


Researchers not only raised the temperature, but also lowered the pressure 
required to achieve superconductivity.

Previously, the Dias team reported creating two materials—carbonaceous sulfur 
hydride and yttrium superhydride—that are superconducting at 58 degrees 
Fahrenheit/39 million psi and 12 degrees Fahrenheit/26 million psi 
respectively, in papers in Nature and Physical Review Letters.

Given the importance of the new discovery, Dias and his team went to unusual 
lengths to document their research and head off criticism that developed in the 
wake of the previous Nature paper, which led to a retraction by the journal's 
editors.

The previous paper has been resubmitted to Nature with new data that validates 
the earlier work, Dias says. The new data was collected outside the lab, at the 
Argonne and Brookhaven National Laboratories in front of an audience of 
scientists who saw the superconducting transition live. A similar approach has 
been taken with the new paper.

Five graduate students in Dias's lab—Nathan Dasenbrock-Gammon, Elliot Snider, 
Raymond McBride, Hiranya Pasan, and Dylan Durkee—are listed as co-lead authors. 
"Everyone in the group was involved in doing the experiments," Dias says. "It 
was truly a collective effort."

'Startling visual transformation' at superconductivity and beyond

Hydrides created by combining rare earth metals with hydrogen, then adding 
nitrogen or carbon, have provided researchers a tantalizing "working recipe" 
for creating superconducting materials in recent years. In technical terms, 
rare earth metal hydrides form clathrate-like cage structures, where the rare 
earth metal ions act as carrier donors, providing sufficient electrons that 
would enhance the dissociation of the H2 molecules. Nitrogen and carbon help 
stabilize materials. Bottom line: less pressure is required for 
superconductivity to occur.

In addition to yttrium, researchers have used other rare earth metals. However, 
the resulting compounds become superconductive at temperatures or pressures 
that are still not practical for applications.

So, this time, Dias looked elsewhere along the periodic table.

Lutetium looked like "a good candidate to try," Dias says. It has highly 
localized fully-filled 14 electrons in its f orbital configuration that 
suppress the phonon softening and provide enhancement to the electron-phonon 
coupling needed for superconductivity to take place at ambient temperatures.

"The key question was, how are we going to stabilize this to lower the required 
pressure? And that's where nitrogen came into the picture."

Nitrogen, like carbon, has a rigid atomic structure that can be used to create 
a more stable, cage-like lattice within a material and it hardens the 
low-frequency optical phonons, according to Dias. This structure provides the 
stability for superconductivity to occur at lower pressure.

Dias's team created a gas mixture of 99% hydrogen and 1% nitrogen, placed it in 
a reaction chamber with a pure sample of lutetium, and let the components react 
for two to three days at 392 degrees Fahrenheit.

The resulting lutetium-nitrogen-hydrogen compound was initially a "lustrous 
bluish color," the paper states.

When the compound was then compressed in a diamond anvil cell, a "startling 
visual transformation" occurred: from blue to pink at the onset of 
superconductivity, and then to a bright red non-superconducting metallic state.

"It was a very bright red," Dias says. "I was shocked to see colors of this 
intensity. We humorously suggested a code name for the material at this 
state—'reddmatter'—after a material that Spock created in the popular 2009 Star 
Trek movie." The code name stuck.

The 145,000 psi of pressure required to induce superconductivity is nearly two 
orders of magnitude lower than the previous low pressure created in Dias's lab.

Dias's lab has now answered the question of whether superconducting material 
can exist at both ambient temperatures and pressures low enough for practical 
applications.

"A pathway to superconducting consumer electronics, energy transfer lines, 
transportation, and significant improvements of magnetic confinement for fusion 
are now a reality," Dias says.

"We believe we are now at the modern superconducting era."

For example, Dias predicts that the nitrogen-doped lutetium hydride will 
greatly accelerate progress in developing tokamak machines to achieve fusion.

Instead of using powerful, converging laser beams to implode a fuel pellet, 
tokamaks rely on strong magnetic fields emitted by a doughnut-shaped enclosure 
to trap, hold, and ignite super-heated plasmas. NDLH, which produces an 
"enormous magnetic field" at room temperatures, "will be a game-changer" for 
the emerging technology, Dias says.

Particularly exciting, according to Dias, is the possibility of training 
machine-learning algorithms with the accumulated data from superconducting 
experimentation in his lab to predict other possible superconducting 
materials—in effect, mixing and matching from thousands of possible 
combinations of rare earth metals, nitrogen, hydrogen, and carbon.

"In day-to-day life we have many different metals we use for different 
applications, so we will also need different kinds of superconducting 
materials," Dias says. "just like we use different metals for different 
applications, we need more ambient superconductors for different applications."

Co-author Keith Lawlor has already begun developing algorithms and making 
calculations using supercomputing resources available through the University of 
Rochester's Center for Integrated Research Computing.

An upstate New York hub for superconducting materials?

Dias's research group recently moved into a new, expanded lab on the third 
floor of Hopeman Hall on the River Campus. This is the first step in an 
ambitious plan to launch a degree-granting Center for Superconducting 
Innovation (CSI) at the University of Rochester, he says.

The center would create an ecosystem for drawing additional faculty and 
scientists to the University to advance the science of superconductivity. The 
trained students would broaden the pool of researchers in the field.

"Our hope is to make upstate New York the hub for superconducting technology," 
Dias says.

--
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to