Posted on 07/25/2015 6:00:39 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
And it could be the key to understanding one of the biggest mysteries in physics today - high-temperature superconductors.
An international team of scientists has announced the discovery of a new state of matter in a material that appears to be an insulator, superconductor, metal and magnet all rolled into one, saying that it could lead to the development of more effective high-temperature superconductors.
Why is this so exciting? Well, if these properties are confirmed, this new state of matter will allow scientists to better understand why some materials have the potential to achieve superconductivity at a relativity high critical temperature (Tc) - "high" as in −135 °C as opposed to −243.2 °C. Because superconductivity allows a material to conduct electricity without resistance, which means no heat, sound, or any other form of energy release, achieving this would revolutionise how we use and produce energy, but its only feasible if we can achieve it at so-called high temperatures.
As Michael Byrne explains at Motherboard, when we talk about states of matter, its not just solids, liquids, gases, and maybe plasmas that we have to think about. We also have to consider the more obscure states that dont occur in nature, but are rather created in the lab - BoseEinstein condensate, degenerate matter, supersolids and superfluids, and quark-gluon plasma, for example.
By introducing rubidium into carbon-60 molecules - more commonly known as 'buckyballs' - a team led by chemist Kosmas Prassides from Tokohu University in Japan was able to change the distance between them, which forced them into a new, crystalline structure. When put through an array of tests, this structure displayed a combination of insulating, superconducting, metallic, and magnetic phases, including a brand new one, which the researchers have named 'Jahn-Teller metals'.
Named after the Jahn-Teller effect, which is used in chemistry to describe how at low pressures, the geometric arrangement of molecules and ions in an electronic state can become distorted, this new state of matter allows scientists to transform an insulator - which cant conduct electricity - into a conductor by simply applying pressure. Byrne explains at Motherboard:
"This is what the rubidium atoms do: apply pressure. Usually when we think about adding pressure, we think in terms of squeezing something, forcing its molecules closer together by brute force. But it's possible to do the same thing chemically, tweaking the distances between molecules by adding or subtracting some sort of barrier between them - sneaking in some extra atoms, perhaps.
What happens in a Jahn-Teller metal is that as pressure is applied, and as what was previously an insulator - thanks to the electrically-distorting Jahn-Teller effect - becomes a metal, the effect persists for a while. The molecules hang on to their old shapes. So, there is an overlap of sorts, where the material still looks an awful lot like an insulator, but the electrons also manage to hop around as freely as if the material were a conductor."
And its this transition phase between insulator and conductor that, until now, scientists have never seen before, and hints at the possibility of transforming insulating materials into super-valuable superconducting materials. And this buckyball crystalline structure appears to be able to do it at a relatively high TC. "The relationship between the parent insulator, the normal metallic state above Tc, and the superconducting pairing mechanism is a key question in understanding all unconventional superconductors," the team writes in Science Advances.
Theres a whole lot of lab-work to be done before this discovery will mean anything for practical energy production in the real world, but thats science for you. And its got people excited already, as chemist Elisabeth Nicol from the University of Guelph in Canada told Hamish Johnston at PhysicsWorld: "Understanding the mechanisms at play and how they can be manipulated to change the Tc surely will inspire the development of new [superconducting] materials".
Things like this, we used to call ‘magic’ or ‘fantasy’.
Today it’s experimental. Tomorrow ?
Yet, despite our ‘advances’, we can’t explain (nor reproduce) the Great Pyramid or Coral Castle.
Maybe we really just have only ‘explored’ the tip of the iceberg. There may be no limit to what CAN be done.
Anyone who thinks the Egyptians built the pyramids by themselves ... well, what can I say?
L8r
Thanks 2ndDivisionVet.Jahn-Teller keyword topics from the FRchives:
bookmark
Is it advanced as Rearden Metal?
At least they’re not Penn-Teller metals.
Wasn’t John Teller the given name of Jax Teller’s dad on SOA.
original peper:
Optimized unconventional superconductivity in a molecular Jahn-Teller metal
http://advances.sciencemag.org/content/1/3/e1500059.full
I doubt if any of those things we built will be here in 200 years, and surely not in 2000 years.
P.S. I especially liked he third picture.
There's a lot of naturally occurring obscure states of matter that exist in, say, neutron stars, for example, where the heat and pressures aren't reproducible in any laboratory condition on earth. Even the center of Jupiter, liquid metallic hydrogen, would not be reproducible here due to the massive pressures involved.
Engineering at the Femto scale, amazing.
I've had a description of the process up on my about page for several years now.
All you need is rope, wood, and a few primitive stone-working tools. And beer and guys, of course.
But can you explain the building of the Coral Castle (not once, but twice) ?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.