Scientists at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and Stanford University have made the first nickel oxide material that shows clear signs of superconductivity—the ability to transmit electrical current with no loss.
Also known as a nickelate, it's the first in a potential new family of unconventional superconductors that's very similar to the copper oxides, or cuprates, whose discovery in 1986 raised hopes that superconductors could someday operate at close to room temperature and revolutionize electronic devices, power transmission and other technologies. Those similarities have scientists wondering if nickelates could also superconduct at relatively high temperatures.
At the same time, the new material seems different from the cuprates in fundamental ways—for instance, it may not contain a type of magnetism that all the superconducting cuprates have—and this could overturn leading theories of how these unconventional superconductors work. After more than three decades of research, no one has pinned that down.
The experiments were led by Danfeng Li, a postdoctoral researcher with the Stanford Institute for Materials and Energy Sciences at SLAC, and described today in Nature.
"This is a very important discovery that requires us to rethink the details of the electronic structure and possible mechanisms of superconductivity in these materials," said George Sawatzky, a professor of physics and chemistry at the University of British Columbia who was not involved in the study but wrote a commentary that accompanied the paper in Nature. "This is going to cause an awful lot of people to jump into investigating this new class of materials, and all sorts of experimental and theoretical work will be done."
Ever since the cuprate superconductors were discovered, scientists have dreamed of making similar oxide materials based on nickel, which is right next to copper on the periodic table of the elements.
But making nickelates with an atomic structure that's conducive to superconductivity turned out to be unexpectedly hard.
"As far as we know, the nickelate we were trying to make is not stable at the very high temperatures—about 600 degrees Celsius—where these materials are normally grown," Li said. "So we needed to start out with something we can stably grow at high temperatures and then transform it at lower temperatures into the form we wanted."
He started with a perovskite—a material defined by its unique, double-pyramid atomic structure—that contained neodymium, nickel and oxygen. Then he doped the perovskite by adding strontium; this is a common process that adds chemicals to a material to make more of its electrons flow freely.
This stole electrons away from nickel atoms, leaving vacant "holes," and the nickel atoms were not happy about it, Li said. The material was now unstable, making the next step—growing a thin film of it on a surface—really challenging; it took him half a year to get it to work.
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