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Topic Name: The Secrets of High-temperature Superconductors
Category: Electronics
Research persons: Christopher Homes,John Tranquada and Genda Gu
Location: Brookhaven National Lab,P.O. Box 5000 Upton, NY 11973-5000(631)344-8000, United States
Details
Although it was discovered more than 20 years ago, a particular type of
high-temperature (Tc) superconductor -- material that conducts electricity with
almost zero resistance -- is regaining the attention of scientists at the U.S.
Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory. Copper-oxide compounds,
called cuprates, operate at temperatures warmer than traditional superconductors
but still far below freezing. Understanding the mechanism for these
superconductors may one day help scientists design superconductors able to
function closer to room temperature for applications such as more-efficient
power transmission.
Discovered in 1986, the most perplexing of these cuprate superconductors is "LBCO,"
named for the elements it contains: lanthanum, barium, copper, and oxygen. After
years of research on similar materials, Brookhaven researchers have learned how
to "grow" better samples of LBCO, which has allowed for extensive studies on its
intriguing properties. Three Brookhaven physicists will discuss their most
recent findings about LBCO at the March 2007 meeting of the American Physical
Society. The details of their research are highlighted below. NOTE: The embargo
date/time for each talk is specified after the title.
A Superconductor with
Insulating Properties
One of the most perplexing findings involving LBCO is that the
high-temperature superconductor actually has distinct insulating-like
properties. Each barium atom has one fewer electron than lanthanum, so
increasing barium adds electron "holes," or the absence of electrons, to the
system. The more barium that is "doped" into the material, the more holes, and
the greater the superconductivity -- until the composition reaches a point where
there is exactly one barium atom for every eight copper atoms, a state known as
the 1/8 doping. Then, oddly, the superconductivity disappears. Above this point,
as more holes (barium atoms) are added, the superconductivity reappears.
Brookhaven physicist Christopher Homes will discuss this odd phenomenon at
9:12 a.m. Mountain Time on March 5, 2007, in the Four Seasons Ballroom 2-3 at
the Colorado Convention Center. At Brookhaven's National Synchrotron Light
Source and other facilities on site, Homes investigates LBCO's electronic
properties by shining various types of light onto an LBCO crystal and measuring
the intensity that is reflected back. This optical picture tells scientists
about the behavior of the charge carriers - or holes - in LBCO. Most materials
have a set number of carriers that scientists can count using these methods. As
a material becomes a superconductor, some of the holes lower their energy by
falling into a superconducting state that allows them to flow without
resistance. As these carriers condense, there is a characteristic change in the
optical conductivity. However, even though LBCO is not a superconductor at the
1/8 doping, the number of holes still decreases at low temperature. Homes and
other researchers attribute this feature to the formation of the so-called
"energy gap." In semiconductors, the charge gap blocks the flow of current
because of its isotropic nature (the gap spreads evenly in all directions).
Superconductors also have energy gaps, but in the cuprates these gaps have
different energies in different directions with respect to the copper-oxygen
chemical bonds.
"The more we look at this charge gap, the more it looks like a
superconducting gap," Homes said. "It has the same magnitude, the same shape and
symmetry. Yet, it doesn't have superconductivity." Homes and other BNL
researchers continue to tackle this mysterious problem in order to understand
why a material that wants to be a superconductor is behaving like an insulator.
Looking for
"Stripes" in High-Tc superconductors
In LBCO, as in all materials, negatively charged electrons repel one another.
But by trying to stay as far apart as possible, each individual electron is
confined to a limited space, which costs energy. To achieve a lower-energy
state, the electrons arrange themselves with their spins aligned in alternating
directions on adjacent atoms, a configuration known as antiferromagnetic order.
As mentioned above, scientists can dope the material with electron "holes," or
the absence of electrons, to allow the electrons/holes to move more freely and
carry current as a superconductor. The question is: How do these holes arrange
themselves?
Brookhaven physicist John Tranquada will answer that question during his talk
about superconducting "stripes" at 9:48 a.m. Mountain Time on March 5, 2007, in
the Four Seasons Ballroom 2-3 at the Colorado Convention Center. Studies
conducted by Tranquada and other Brookhaven researchers support the
controversial theory that the holes segregate themselves into stripes that
alternate with antiferromagnetic regions in the material.
"There's a lot of excitement in trying to understand why these materials are
superconducting, and there's plenty of controversy surrounding it," Tranquada
said.
Most recently, Tranquada's research group examined the effect of the stripes
on vibrations in the crystal lattice. Lattice vibrations play a role in pairing
up the electrons that carry current in conventional superconductors. At the
Laboratorie Leon Brillouin, Saclay, in France, researchers bombarded samples of
superconducting materials and the same stripe-ordered non-superconductor with
beams of neutrons and measured how the beams scattered. Comparing the energy and
momentum of the incoming beams with those scattered by the samples gives the
scientists a measure of how much energy and momentum is transferred to the
lattice vibrations. Each of these vibrations normally has a particular,
well-defined frequency for a given wavelength. But in the superconductor
experiment, at a particular wavelength, the scientists observed an anomaly: a
wider range of frequencies in the lattice vibrations.
The scientists observed this anomalous signature most clearly in samples with
observable stripe order, but they also saw it in samples of good superconductors
without static stripes. This indicates the presence of dynamic stripes - meaning
that the stripes can wiggle through the crystal lattice - and suggests that
stripes might be important in the mechanism for high-Tc superconductivity,
Tranquada said.
Paving the Way for Crystal
Growth
In order to study the properties of LBCO superconductors, scientists need to
produce large, single crystals of the material - a difficult task that wasn't
possible until recently. At the state-of-the-art crystal growth facility in
Brookhaven's physics building, physicist Genda Gu and his colleagues have
perfected the process. Gu will discuss his crystal growth method at 11:51 a.m.
Mountain Time on March 7, 2007, in Korbel Ballroom 1D at the Colorado Convention
Center.
The crystals are grown in an infrared image furnace, a machine with two
mirrors that focuses infrared light onto a feed rod, heating it to about 2,200
degrees Celsius (3,992 degrees Fahrenheit) and causing it to melt. Under just
the right conditions, Gu and his colleagues can make the liquefied material
recrystallize as a single uniform crystal. At present, the most interesting form
of LBCO has one barium atom for every eight copper atoms, or a 1/8 "doping," at
which point the material loses its superconductivity. Achieving this high barium
concentration is extremely difficult and is the reason many scientists
previously opted to use different but related materials for their research on
superconducting stripes and other properties, Gu said.
"LBCO was the first high-temperature superconductor discovered, but everyone
switched over to studying other materials for a while because they weren't able
to grow single crystals with a concentration of barium greater than 11 percent,"
Gu said. "Now, we can study the whole class of high-Tc materials."
Each crystal takes about a month to make, with precise control over growth
temperature, atmosphere, and other factors. Brookhaven is currently capable of
making crystals with barium concentrations up to 16.5 percent, a world record,
Gu said.
The research conducted by Homes, Tranquada, and Gu is funded by the Office of
Basic Energy Sciences within the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science.
Funded by:
One of ten national laboratories overseen and primarily funded by the Office
of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Brookhaven National
Laboratory conducts research in the physical, biomedical, and environmental
sciences, as well as in energy technologies and national security. Brookhaven
Lab also builds and operates major scientific facilities available to
university, industry and government researchers. Brookhaven is operated and
managed for DOE’s Office of Science by Brookhaven Science Associates, a
limited-liability company founded by Stony Brook University, the largest
academic user of Laboratory facilities, and Battelle, a nonprofit, applied
science and technology organization.
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