New
Room-Temperature Superconductor Offers Tantalizing Possibilities
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Two Indian Origin Scientists in Rochester
behind Invention
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The new superconductor consists of lutetium,
a rare earth metal, and hydrogen with a little bit of nitrogen mixed in. It needs
to be compressed to a pressure of 145,000 pounds per square inch before it gains
its superconducting prowess.
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Superconductivity was discovered by Heike
Kamerlingh Onnes, a Dutch physicist, and his team in 1911.
Not only do superconductors carry electricity with essentially zero electrical resistance,
but they also possess the strange ability known as the Meissner effect that ensures
zero magnetic field inside the material.
The breakthrough could one day
transform technologies that use electric energy, but it comes from a team facing
doubts after a retracted paper on superconductors.
Scientists announced this week
a tantalizing advance toward the dream of a material that could effortlessly convey
electricity in everyday conditions. Such a breakthrough could transform almost any
technology that uses electric energy, opening new possibilities for your phone,
magnetically levitating trains and future fusion power plants.
Usually, the flow of electricity
encounters resistance as it moves through wires, almost like a form of friction,
and some energy is lost as heat. A century ago, physicists discovered materials,
now called superconductors, where the electrical resistance seemingly magically
disappeared. But these materials only lost their resistance at unearthly, ultracold
temperatures, which limited practical applications. For decades, scientists have
sought superconductors that work at room temperatures.
This week’s announcement is the
latest attempt in that effort, but it comes from a team that faces wide skepticism because a 2020 paper that described a promising but less
practical superconducting material was retracted after
other scientists questioned some of the data.
The new superconductor consists
of lutetium, a rare earth metal, and hydrogen with a little bit of nitrogen mixed
in. It needs to be compressed to a pressure of 145,000 pounds per square inch before
it gains its superconducting prowess. That is about 10 times the pressure that is
exerted at the bottom of the ocean’s deepest trenches.
But it is also less than one
one-hundredth of what the 2020 result required, which was akin to the crushing forces
found several thousand miles deep within the Earth. That suggests that further investigations
of the material could lead to a superconductor that works at ambient room temperatures
and at the usual atmospheric pressure of 14.7 pounds per square inch.
“This is the start of the new
type of material that is useful for practical applications,” Ranga P. Dias, a professor
of mechanical engineering and physics at the University of Rochester in New York,
said to a room packed full of scientists on Tuesday at a meeting of the American
Physical Society in Las Vegas.
A fuller accounting of his team’s
findings was published
on Wednesday in the Nature, the same journal that published, then retracted
the 2020 findings.
The team at Rochester started
with a small, thin foil of lutetium, a silvery white metal that is among the rarest
of rare earth elements, and pressed it between two interlocking diamonds. A gas
of 99 percent hydrogen and 1 percent nitrogen was then pumped into the tiny chamber
and squeezed to high pressures. The sample was heated overnight at 150 degrees Fahrenheit,
and after 24 hours, the pressure was released.
About one-third of the time,
the process produced the desired result: a small vibrant blue crystal. “Doping nitrogen
into lutetium hydride is not that easy,” Dr. Dias said.
In one of the University of Rochester
laboratory rooms used by Dr. Dias’s group, Hiranya Pasan, a graduate student, demonstrated the surprising hue-changing
property of the material during a reporter’s visit last week. As screws tightened
to ratchet up the pressure, the blue turned into a blushing tint.
“It is very pink,” Dr. Dias said. With even higher pressures, he said, “it goes
to a bright red.”
Shining a laser through the crystals
revealed how they vibrate and unlocked information about the structure.
In another room, other members
of Dr. Dias’s team were making magnetic measurements on
other crystals. As the temperatures dropped, the expected squiggles appeared in
the data plotted on a computer screen, indicating a transition to a superconductor.
“This is a live measurement we’re
doing right now,” Dr. Dias said.
In the paper, the researchers
reported that the pink crystals exhibited key properties of superconductors, like
zero resistance, at temperatures up to 70 degrees Fahrenheit.
“I’m cautiously optimistic,”
said Timothy Strobel, a scientist at the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington
who was not involved in Dr. Dias’s study. “The data in
the paper, it looks great.”
“If this is real, it’s a really
important breakthrough,” said Paul C.W. Chu, a professor of physics at the University
of Houston who also was not involved with the research.
However, the “if” part of that
sentiment swirls around Dr. Dias, who has been dogged
by doubts and criticism, and even accusations by a few scientists that he has fabricated
some of his data. The results of the 2020 Nature paper have yet to be reproduced
by other research groups, and critics say that Dr. Dias
has been slow to let others examine his data or perform independent analyses of
his superconductors.
The editors of Nature retracted
the earlier paper last year over the objections of Dr.
Dias and the other authors.
“I’ve lost some trust in what’s
coming from that group,” said James Hamlin, a professor of physics at the University
of Florida.
Nonetheless, the new paper made
it through the peer review process at the same journal.
“Having a paper retracted does
not automatically disqualify an author from submitting new manuscripts,” a spokeswoman
for Nature said. “All submitted manuscripts are considered independently on the
basis of the quality and timeliness of their science.”
At the conference on Tuesday
in Las Vegas, so many physicists crowded a narrow meeting room that a moderator
asked some to leave so that they wouldn’t have to cancel the presentation. Once
the room thinned out, Dr. Dias was able to present his
findings with no interruptions. As he thanked the crowd, the moderator expressed
regret that they had run out of time for questions.
Dr. Strobel
acknowledged the continuing controversy around Dr. Dias
and the earlier extraordinary claims that have yet to be reproduced.
“I don’t want to read into it
too much, but there could be a pattern of behavior here,”
Dr. Strobel said. “He really could be the best high-pressure
physicist in the world, poised to win the Nobel Prize. Or there’s something else
going on.”
Under Pressure
Superconductivity was discovered
by Heike Kamerlingh Onnes, a Dutch physicist, and his
team in 1911. Not only do superconductors carry electricity with essentially zero
electrical resistance, but they also possess the strange ability known as the Meissner
effect that ensures zero magnetic field inside the material.
The first known superconductors
required temperatures only a few degrees above absolute zero, or minus 459.67 degrees
Fahrenheit. In the 1980s, physicists discovered so-called high-temperature superconductors,
but even those became superconducting in conditions far more frigid than those encountered
in everyday use.
The standard theory explaining
superconductivity predicts that hydrogen should be a superconductor at higher temperatures
if it could be squeezed hard enough. But even the most resilient of diamonds break
before reaching pressures of that magnitude. Scientists started looking at hydrogen
mixed with one other element, surmising that the chemical bonds might help compress
the hydrogen atoms.
In 2015, Mikhail Eremets, a physicist at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry
in Mainz, Germany, reported that hydrogen sulfide — a
molecule consisting of two hydrogen atoms and one sulfur
atom — turned superconducting at minus 94 degrees Fahrenheit when squeezed to about
22 million pounds per square inch. That was a record high temperature for a superconductor
at the time.
Dr. Eremets and other scientists subsequently discovered that lanthanum
hydride — a compound containing hydrogen and lanthanum — reached a superconducting
temperature of minus 10 degrees Fahrenheit at ultrahigh pressures.
In the research described in
the retracted 2020 paper, Dr. Dias’s group used hydrogen,
sulfur and carbon. With three elements, the scientists
said, they were able to adjust the electronic properties of the compound to achieve
a higher superconducting temperature.
Not everyone believed that, however.
Dr. Dias’s
main antagonist is Jorge Hirsch, a theoretical physicist at the University of California,
San Diego. He focused on the measurements that Dr. Dias’s
group had made of the response of the carbon-sulfur-hydrogen
compound to oscillating magnetic fields, evidence of the Meissner effect. The plot
in the paper seemed too neat, and the scientists did not explain how they had subtracted
out background effects in the plot.
When Dr.
Dias released the underlying raw data, Dr. Hirsch said,
his analysis indicated that it had been generated by a mathematical formula and
could not be actually measured in an experiment. “From a measurement, you do not
get analytic formulas,” Dr. Hirsch said. “You get numbers
with noise.”
His complaints about Dr. Dias grew so persistent and strident that others in the
field circulated a letter complaining about decades of disruptive behavior by Dr. Hirsch.
Dr. Hirsch
is a bull-in-a-china-shop contrarian taking aim at B.C.S.
theory, which was devised in 1957 by three physicists — John Bardeen, Leon N. Cooper
and J. Robert Schrieffer — to explain how superconductivity works. B.C.S., he
says,
may in many ways, “be fundamentally flawed,” unable to explain the Meissner effect.
He has come up with his own alternative explanation.
Notably, Dr.
Hirsch has been saying that there cannot be superconductivity in any of these high-pressure
materials because hydrogen cannot be a superconductor. He has gained few allies.
While Dr.
Hirsch is careful to say that scientists other than Dr.
Dias are not committing misconduct, he says they are deluding themselves.
“In my opinion, the junk becomes
conclusions,” he said.
Resistance and Reproduction
Dr. Hamlin
of the University of Florida also delved into the magnetic measurements and said
it looked more as though the raw data had been derived from the published data and
not the other way around.
Dr. Hamlin
was also disturbed when he found that several passages from his doctoral thesis,
written in 2007, had appeared, word for word, in Dr. Dias’s
dissertation.
Dr. Dias
dismisses the continuing criticism and says his group provided explanations. “I
just felt like it was just noise from the background,” he said. “We try to keep
pushing our science forward.”
He said that he still stood by
the earlier results and that Wednesday’s paper employed a new technique for the
magnetic measurements. He said that the paper had gone through five rounds of scrutiny
by the reviewers and that all of the raw data underlying the findings were being
shared.
“It is back again in Nature,”
Dr. Dias said. “So that tells you something.”
Sara Miller, a University of
Rochester spokeswoman, said that after two university inquiries, “it was determined
that there was no evidence that supported the concerns.” She also said that the
university had “considered the matter of the September 2022 retraction of the Nature
paper and came to the same conclusion.”
Of the copying of text from Dr. Hamlin’s doctoral thesis, Dr.
Dias said he should have included citations. “It was my mistake,” Dr. Dias said.
A preprint redoing measurements
of the carbon-sulfur-hydrogen material from
the retracted 2020 paper is now circulating, but even that raises questions. “They’re
significantly different from the original measurements,” Dr.
Strobel said. “One could argue they haven’t even reproduced results themselves.”
Because the new lutetium-based
material is superconducting at much lower pressures, many other research groups
will be able to attempt to reproduce the experiment. Dr.
Dias said he wanted to provide a more precise recipe for how to make the compound
and to share samples, but intellectual property issues need to be resolved first.
He has founded a company, Unearthly Materials, that plans to turn the research into
profits.
Dr. Strobel
said he would begin work as soon as he returned from the Las Vegas conference. “We
can have a result literally within a day,” he said.
Dr. Hirsch
also said that he expected answers to come quickly. “If this is right, it proves
my work of the last 35 years wrong,” he said. “Which I would be very happy about,
because I would know.”
Dr. Hirsch
added, “But I think I’m right and this is wrong.”