exotic superconductivity

topic posted Thu, August 17, 2006 - 1:59 PM by  jon
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University of Arizona Associate Professor of Physics Andrei Lebed has discovered that strong magnetism changes the basic, intrinsic properties of electrons flowing through superconductors, establishing an "exotic" superconductivity.

"Understanding the physical nature of the electron pairs that define superconductors is one of the most important problems in condensed matter physics," Lebed said. He published the research earlier this year in Physical Review Letters. He said the work is one of his most important contributions to physics in his 20-year career.

A Dutch physicist, Heike Kamerlingh Onnes, is credited with discovering superconductivity in 1911, work for which he was awarded a 1913 Nobel Prize.

Kamerlingh Onnes' momentous discovery was that pure metals such as mercury, tin and lead become "superconductors" at very low temperatures. When cooled to near absolute zero temperatures, certain conducting metals suddenly lose all electrical resistance. At zero electrical resistance, the metals will conduct electric current endlessly.

Physicists began winning Nobel Prizes for pioneering theory to explain the phenomenon of superconductivity a half century ago. In 1957, American physicists John Bardeen, Leon Cooper and Robert Schrieffer proposed a comprehensive theory to explain the behavior of superconducting materials. The theory, called "BCS theory" for the scientists' surname initials, was the first great insight, the first big step in understanding superconductivity. The work garnered them the 1972 Nobel Prize in Physics.

Cooper had discovered that electrons in a superconductor don't act as individual particles, but as pairs, now called "Cooper pairs." When electrical voltage is applied to a superconductor, all Cooper pairs move as a single entity, establishing an electrical current. When the voltage is cut off, the current continues to flow indefinitely because there is no resistance to the Cooper pairs motion. This normally works only at very low temperatures. When the superconductor warms up, its Cooper pairs separate into individual electrons and the material becomes a normal non-superconductor.

"People always have thought about the Cooper pair as behaving as an elementary particle, which is characterized by size (or, roughly speaking, the average distance between the electrons in a Cooper pair), electric charge, spin, mirror reflection and time-reversal properties," Lebed said.

Contrary to this commonly held theory, Lebed said, "We show that superconducting electron pairs are not unchanged elementary particles but rather complex objects with characteristics that depend on the strength of a magnetic field."

Some background to understand how this works: American physicists David Lee, Douglas Osheroff, Robert Richardson and Anthony Leggett won Nobel Prizes in Physics in 1996 and 2003 for their theoretical and experimental studies of rotating Cooper pairs in helium-3. They discovered that electrons in a Cooper pair, no matter how far apart they are, have either conventional "singlet" or unconventional "triplet" internal rotation, or "spin" in quantum physics jargon.

When the spins of the two electrons are in opposite directions, one spinning up and the other spinning down, they are called singlets, or non-rotating Cooper pairs. When the spins are in same direction, they are called triplets, or rotating Cooper pairs.

Lebed has now discovered that super-strong magnetic fields create exotic Cooper pairs that behave according to the weird, non-intuitive laws of quantum mechanics: the electron pairs are both rotating and non-rotating at the same time. They behave kind of like microscopic "quantum mechanical hurricanes," as UA Regents' Professor Pierre Meystre, head of UA's physics department, put it.

Another unexpected and unique magnetic field-dependent property is mirror reflection.

Because Cooper pairs are quantum objects, they behave both as particles and as standing waves. One standing wave property is mirror reflection, or "parity." Physicists earlier found that wave symmetry in conventional, or singlet, superconductors is even. It is mathematically termed as +1. They also discovered that unconventional, or triplet, superconductor parity is odd, or - 1.

When singlets or triplets are reflected in a mirror, the reflected waves always have the same (+1) or opposite (-1) parity of the original waves.

Lebed finds that in strong magnetic fields, Cooper pair wave symmetries break down. The reflected waves don't look like the original waves. "It's like the Cooper pair wave sees someone else in the mirror," he said. "It's like Alice's adventure in a super-wonderland, where the mirrors are unusual and wrong."

"Because these Cooper pair electrons behave so differently than conventional singlet and unconventional triplet Cooper pairs, we call them 'exotic' Cooper pairs," he said.

Lebed provides a simple, whimsical picture to help explain the concept of this broken mirror symmetry.

UA physics graduate student Omjyoti Dutta and Lebed are now collaborating on more detailed theoretical studies of exotic superconducting phases. They have very recently discovered that "time-reversal" symmetry also breaks down in exotic Cooper pairs.

Time reversal symmetry is the idea that most fundamental physical laws would not change if time ran backwards instead of forward.

"This is the most fundamental symmetry in physics and breaks down only in some rare processes in high energy, or elementary particle, physics," Lebed said.

But the UA physicists find that time-reversal symmetry is broken because of the simultaneous rotating and non-rotating average spins of exotic Cooper pairs. "Half of the exotic Cooper pair electrons 'see' time directed from the past to the future, whereas the other half 'see' time directed from the future to the past," Lebed said.

"It's important to note that our theoretical results are very general," he said. "They are based on a mathematical theorem and have to be experimentally applied to most kinds of existing superconducting materials, including high-temperature superconductors."

The UA physicists are designing simple experiments for observing exotic superconductivity.

"We hope that our discovery of the exotic behavior of superconductivity in high magnetic fields eventually improves our understanding of how to most efficiently produce strong persistent currents in superconductors," Lebed said.

Superconductors are sought by energy, transportation, medical and computing industries. More practical, affordable superconductors would be a boon to power utilities that would realize enormous savings in more efficient systems for generating and storing electricity, to the transportation industry which is experimenting with trains that float above their tracks using superconducting magnets, to medical technologists who are developing improved magnetic resonance imaging, and to the supercomputing industry that seeks very fast electronic switches needed to build "petaflop" computers capable of performing a thousand-trillion floating point operations per second.


www.physorg.com/news74969937.html
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jon
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  • Re: exotic superconductivity

    Thu, August 17, 2006 - 2:53 PM
    That would help explain theoretically some aspects of higher temperature super-conducting materials?

    However, in this I'm not truly qualified enough to do anything more the speculation...
    • Re: exotic superconductivity

      Thu, August 17, 2006 - 3:38 PM
      No. The high temperature superconductors are strange and still not well understood. Last I heard they where considered to be D-wave materials and at least some appear to have alternating magnetic and diamagnetic regions (it has been a few years, so I don't know how that has changed).

      BTW BCS theory does not apply to these materials. BCS theory uses lattice vibrations to create the coupling force that forces the cooper pairs. At the critical temperatures of the high temp SC, the amplitudes of vibrations are so great they would just scatter the electrons and prevent pairing.

      The singlets and triplets that are discussed are the S-wave and first excited state of the cooper pairs (P-wave) of BCS theory. The S-wave is like the s-orbital of the hydrogen atom, totally symmetric and can hold only two electrons of opposite spin (net spin zero). The P-wave is a composite of two anti-symmetric wave functions (like the hydrogen p-orbitals), one in the x-direction the other in the y-direction where each electron can be spin up or spin down. This gives 3 possible states; net spin: 1 (lowest energy P-wave in a magnetic field), 0 (energy of the state without the magnetic field) and -1 (highest energy). Both the +1 and -1 P-waves have a magnetic field associated with them: the +1 has a field parallel to the applied field and the -1 is opposite.

      Although not directly applicable, these results do have there analogs in the high temp SC, just with the D-waves where things get more complex.
      • Re: exotic superconductivity

        Thu, August 17, 2006 - 3:41 PM
        Your right, I should have stated something to the effect of -- "analogicly something like this could help explain higher temperature superconductivity..."
        • Re: exotic superconductivity

          Thu, August 17, 2006 - 5:25 PM
          "Your right, I should have stated something to the effect of -- "analogicly something like this could help explain higher temperature superconductivity...""

          The processes described may have their analogs in HTSC but is very unlikely to be the explaination of how HTSC actually work. It is possible that part of the coupling force that makes cooper pairs, in HTSC, is magnetic which would be additive with vibrational forces - stronger coupling allows for higher energy. But that would strongly imply that the whole material be magnetic instead of diamagnetic (with or without vortices). By the way, BCS does predict vortices (which allow magnetic field to penetrate otherwise diamagnetic SC).
          • Re: exotic superconductivity

            Fri, August 18, 2006 - 11:39 AM
            Hmm I would wish they would use the term
            "exotic" more specificly as in reference to vacuum energy (negative mass)
            This is just simply novel not exotic.....
            • Re: exotic superconductivity

              Fri, August 18, 2006 - 4:34 PM
              >>>The processes described may have their analogs in HTSC but is very unlikely to be the explaination of how HTSC actually work.<<<

              Agreed, but it could get the wheel of thought moving.

              However, as I stated before I'm far too much of a laymen for this kind of subject.
              • Re: exotic superconductivity

                Fri, August 18, 2006 - 6:49 PM
                "However, as I stated before I'm far too much of a laymen for this kind of subject."

                But it is by talking about this kind of subject that one stops being a laymen. Truth be told I'm not that far ahead of you (probably a relative term when comparing oneself to those who do this for a living).
  • Unsu...
     

    Re: exotic superconductivity

    Wed, August 30, 2006 - 4:37 PM
    I'm speculating that nanotechnology could create these lattices that seem to form naturally in "middle" level temperature superconductors in a room temperature material...
    • Re: exotic superconductivity

      Wed, August 30, 2006 - 5:39 PM
      Nanotech hold the promise of very fine control of the structure of materials. So, in a sense, yes nanotech can help make a RT superconductor. Unfortunately superconduction isn't a chemical phenomena, at least not in the sense of how atoms are organized. To make a RT superconductor one needs to find a material where the forces that bind the Cooper pairs together is strong enough to be stable at RT without being so strong that the pairs are bound to a location.

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