
New theory for latest high-temperature superconductors
Date: Sunday, August 17, 2008 @ 21:47:59 UTC Topic: Science
Physicists from Rice and Rutgers universities have published a new
theory that explains some of the complex electronic and magnetic
properties of iron "pnictides." In a series of startling discoveries
this spring, pnictides were shown to superconduct at relatively high
temperatures. The surprising discoveries created a great deal of
excitement in the condensed matter physics community, which has been
scrambling to better understand and document the unexpected results.
High-temperature
superconductivity -- a phenomenon first documented in 1986 -- remains
one of the great, unexplained mysteries of condensed matter physics.
Until the discovery of the iron pnictides (pronounced NIK-tides), the
phenomena was limited to a class of copper-based compounds called
"cuprates" (pronounced COO-prayts).
The new pnictide theory appears in this week's issue of Physical Review Letters.
"There is a great deal of excitement in the quantum condensed
matter community about the iron pnictides," said paper co-author Qimiao
Si, Rice University theoretical physicist. "For more than 20 years, our
perspective was limited to cuprates, and it is hoped that this new
class of materials will help us understand the mechanism for
high-temperature superconductivity."
From its initial discovery, high-temperature superconductivity came
as a shock to physicists. Superconductors are materials that conduct
electricity without any resistance, and in 1986, the prevailing theory
of superconductivity held that the phenomenon could not occur at
temperatures greater than about 30 kelvins (minus 405 degrees
Fahrenheit). Some cuprates have since been discovered to superconduct
at temperatures higher than 140 kelvins.
The 2006 discovery of superconductivity in one iron pnictide did
not receive much notice from the physics community, since it occurred
only below several kelvins. In February 2008, a group from Japan
discovered superconductivity above 20 kelvins in another of the iron
pnictides. In March and April, several research groups from China
showed that related iron pnictides superconduct at temperatures greater
than 50 kelvins.
In their new theory, Si and
Rutgers University theorist Elihu Abrahams explain some of the
similarities and differences between cuprates and pnictides. The
arrangement of atoms in both types of materials creates a "strongly
correlated electron system" in which electrons interact in a
coordinated way and behave collectively.
Si and Abrahams propose that the pnictides exhibit a property
called "magnetic frustration," a particular atomic arrangement that
suppresses the natural tendency of iron atoms to magnetically order
themselves in relation to each other. These frustration effects enhance
magnetic quantum fluctuations, which may be responsible for the
high-temperature superconductivity.
"Precisely how this happens is one of the challenging questions in
strongly correlated electron systems," Abrahams said. "But even though
we don't know the precise mechanism, we are still able to make some
general predictions about the behavior of pnictides, and we've
suggested a number of experiments that can test these predictions." The
tests include some specific forms of the electronic spectrum and spin
states.
Source: Rice University Via: http://www.physorg.com/news137852143.html
|
|