What Is Superconductivity?
- Metals are materials that provide resistance to the flow of current.
- Superconductors would conduct current without any resistance (e.g., zinc at 272.3ºC) due to the fact that they host Cooper pairs, which are two electrons bound together at low energy states.
- So the older theory has it that, at 0K, the metals can either be very good insulators (zero conductivity) or good superconductors (infinite conductivity).
What Are the Bose Metals?
- A peculiar metallic state in which
- Cooper pairs form (like in superconductors).
- But superconductivity doesn’t set in the material conducts better yet never attains zero resistance.
- It stands against all existing theories of superconductivity and quantum behavior.
Niobium Diselenide (NbSe₂) A Bose Metal?
The Experiment
- Material: Ultra thin Niobium Diselenide (NbSe₂).
- Situation: Applied under particular magnetic fields.
- Results:
- Cooper pairs formed.
- Hall resistance was zero (which proved that Cooper pairs were indeed charge carriers).
- No superconducting state occurred.
Significance
- Strong evidence for the existence of the Bose metal.
- Proves to challenge theories on superconductivity, yet it can forge new avenues in physics modeling.
Applications
- No direct applications to date, but:
- Enhances the understanding of quantum materials.
- May impact the future generation of superconductors and electronics.
- Pours knowledge into disordered metals and quantum phase transitions.
There may be some forsaken few who saw the glimmer of a new state of matter meeting neither the perceived classical nor the microscopic rules and potentially on a path to a new physics in condensed matter.
Source: TH