Matter News
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to MatterNews.com RSS Feed Subscribe
New Articles
Researchers have proven a significant version of the quantum unique ergodicity conjecture 10/12/2008

Lab probes iron-arsenic superconductors 10/11/2008

Spallation Neutron Source sends first neutrons to 'Big Bang' beam line 10/10/2008

Scientists engineer superconducting thin films 10/9/2008

New knowledge about thermoelectric materials could give better energy efficiency 10/8/2008

Fuzziness on the road to physics' grand unification theory 10/7/2008

Brilliantly bright light source is one step closer to reality, says scientist 10/5/2008

Zooming way in, technique offers close-ups of electrons, nuclei 10/2/2008

Micro honeycomb materials enable new physics in aicraft sound reduction 9/30/2008

Research gets to the heart of the scatter 9/28/2008

Quantum leap in hi-tech performance 9/26/2008

Unlocking the secret of the Kondo Effect 9/23/2008

Checking people at airports - with terahertz radiation 9/20/2008

Scientists create first dense gas of ultracold 'polar' molecules 9/19/2008

Study of repeater brings quantum communication closer to reality 9/18/2008

Physicists Develop 'Impossible' Technique to Study and Develop Superconductors (6/25/2008)

Tags:
superconductors, superconductivity

A team of University of British Columbia researchers has developed a technique that controls the number of electrons on the surface of high-temperature superconductors, a procedure considered impossible for the past two decades.

Led by Physics Assoc. Prof. Andrea Damascelli, the team deposited potassium atoms onto the surface of a piece of superconducting copper oxide. The approach allows the scientists to continuously manipulate the number of electrons on ultra-thin layers of material.

The details are published this week in the prestigious journal Nature Physics.

Superconductivity -- the phenomenon of conducting electricity with no resistance -- occurs in some materials at very low temperatures. High-temperature superconductors are a class of materials capable of conducting electricity with little or no resistance in temperatures as high as -140 degrees Celsius.

"The development of future electronics, such as quantum computer chips, hinges on extremely thin layers of material," says Damascelli, Canada Research Chair in the Electronic Structure of Solids.

"Extremely thin layers and surfaces of superconducting materials take on very different properties from the rest of the material. Electrons have been observed to re-arrange, making it impossible for scientists to study," says Damascelli. "It's become clear in recent years that this phenomenon is both the challenge and key to making great strides in superconductor research.

"The new technique opens the door to systematic studies not just of high-temperature superconductors, but many other materials where surfaces and interfaces control the physical properties," says Damascelli. "The control of surfaces and interfaces plays a vital role in the development of applications such as fuel cells and lossless power lines, and may lead to new materials altogether."

The superconductors Damascelli's team experimented on are the purest samples currently available and were produced at UBC by physicists Doug Bonn, Ruixing Liang and Walter Hardy.

Part of the study was carried out at the Advanced Light Source synchrotron in California. In the future, the design and study of novel complex materials for next-generation technologies will be carried out at the Quantum Materials Spectroscopy Center currently under construction at the Canadian Light Source in Saskatoon under Damascelli's leadership.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the University of British Columbia

Post Comments:

Search

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.