| September
21, 1999
Media Contact:
Mario Aguilera, (858) 534-7572, maguilera@ucsd.edu
UCSD PHYSICIST
PUSHES AHEAD IN DESCRIBING THE ‘PAIRING GLUE’ IN NOVEL
SUPERCONDUCTING MATERIALS
Dimitri Basov of the
Department of Physics at the University of California, San Diego,
along with collaborators J.P. Carbotte of McMaster University and E.
Schachinger of the University of Graz, has shed new light on one of
the cornerstones of contemporary physics: finding ways to describe the
fundamental mechanisms behind superconductivity in oxide
superconductors, the materials that lose resistance to electricity at
unusually high temperature.
Superconductors hold
the alluring ability to conduct electrical currents without
resistance, in contrast to currently used metallic wires, and hence
offer a unique ability to conserve energy and money.
“High-temperature”
superconductors, discovered 12 years ago, were hailed as a more viable
technology because they lose resistance at temperatures well above the
levels of ordinary superconducting metals, such as lead and aluminum.
High temperature superconductors are complex intermetallic compounds
based on the oxide of copper, or cuprates. They exhibit the ability to
conduct electrical current without losses at temperatures approaching
the coldest temperatures on Earth and well above the temperatures of
the ordinary elemental superconductors. Over the last 12 years
scientists have actively pursued the mechanisms behind
high-temperature superconductivity, publishing more than 44,000
articles on this subject in refereed journals.
In the September 23
issue of the journal Nature, Basov and his collaborators describe a
novel approach towards the analysis of the optical properties of
high-temperature superconductors. The approach provides clues about
the nature of electron pairing—the basis for loss-less conduction.
In superconductors,
electrons bind in pairs that are capable of propagating without
resistance. On the contrary, unpaired electrons—in wires made out of
ordinary metals—are subject to scattering.
The search for the
mechanisms behind superconductivity has become the search for the
strong “glue” that keeps electrons bonded in pairs.
Furthermore, the
possibility of studying the pairing phenomenon through optical means
was unclear.
“It had been
unclear whether one could obtain this particular information about the
coupling through optical experiments, but this paper proves that we
can,” said Basov, an assistant professor of physics at UCSD. “Now
that we know that we can derive information from optics, we can begin
to look at different types of high-temperature superconductors. If
this is a generic effect, then it should be repeatable.”
Basov’s
experiments employed state-of-the-art optical instruments that he and
his students have developed at UCSD. The researchers were able to
observe the coupling behavior by studying optical properties in
frequencies that spanned from microwave through the infrared range to
ultraviolet light.
Basov hopes that by
pinpointing the mechanisms responsible for high-temperature
superconductivity, scientists may be able to develop novel materials
for specific purposes, including satellite communications and other
areas.
The history of
superconductivity goes back to earlier this century when Dutch
physicist Haike Kamerlingh Onnes discovered the phenomenon by cooling
metallic mercury to minus 452 degrees Fahrenheit. High-temperature
superconduction has been achieved at nearly minus 170 degrees
Fahrenheit.
The research
described in the Nature paper was supported by the National Science
Foundation’s Early Career Development program, the Natural Sciences
and Engineering Research Council of Canada and the Canadian Institute
for Advanced Research. Dimitri Basov is a Cottrell Fellow of the
Research Corporation. |