Scientists enter unexplored territory in superconductivity search

Scientists enter unexplored territory in superconductivity search
The Fermi surface, or the highest occupied state in the electronic structure, allows direct determination of the doping level. This picture shows the Fermi surface of the highly overdoped, non-superconducting BSCCO where the holes were added into the material by exposure to ozone. Credit: Brookhaven National Laboratory

Scientists mapping out the quantum characteristics of superconductors—materials that conduct electricity with no energy loss—have entered a new regime. Using newly connected tools named OASIS at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory, they've uncovered previously inaccessible details of the "phase diagram" of one of the most commonly studied "high-temperature" superconductors. The newly mapped data includes signals of what happens when superconductivity vanishes.

"In terms of , this may sound bad, but if you study some phenomenon, it is always good to be able to approach it from its origin," said Brookhaven physicist Tonica Valla, who led the study just published in the journal Nature Communications. "If you have a chance to see how superconductivity disappears, that in turn might give insight into what causes superconductivity in the first place."

Unlocking the secrets of superconductivity holds great promise in addressing energy challenges. Materials able to carry current over with no loss would revolutionize power transmission, eliminate the need for cooling computer-packed data centers, and lead to new forms of energy storage, for example. The hitch is that, at present, most known superconductors, even the "high-temperature" varieties, must themselves be kept super cold to perform their current-carrying magic. So, scientists have been trying to understand the key characteristics that cause superconductivity in these materials with the goal of discovering or creating new that can operate at temperatures more practical for these everyday applications.

The Brookhaven team was studying a well-known high-temperature superconductor made of layers that include bismuth-oxide, strontium-oxide, calcium, and copper-oxide (abbreviated as BSCCO). Cleaving crystals of this material creates pristine bismuth-oxide surfaces. When they analyzed the electronic structure of the pristine cleaved surface, they saw telltale signs of superconductivity at a transition temperature (Tc) of 94 Kelvin (-179 degrees Celsius)—the highest temperature at which superconductivity sets in for this well-studied material.

The team then heated samples in ozone (O3) and found that they could achieve high doping levels and explore previously unexplored portions of this material's phase diagram, which is a map-like graph showing how the material changes its properties at different temperatures under different conditions (similar to the way you can map out the temperature and pressure coordinates at which liquid water freezes when it is cooled, or changes to steam when heated). In this case, the variable the scientists were interested in was how many charge vacancies, or "holes," were added, or "doped" into the material by the exposure to ozone. Holes facilitate the flow of current by giving the charges (electrons) somewhere to go.

"For this material, if you start with the crystal of 'parent' compound, which is an insulator (meaning no conductivity), the introduction of holes results in superconductivity," Valla said. As more holes are added, the superconductivity gets stronger and at higher temperatures up to a maximum at 94 Kelvin, he explained. "Then, with more holes, the material becomes 'over-doped,' and Tc goes down—for this material, to 50 K.

Scientists enter unexplored territory in superconductivity search
This phase diagram for BSCCO plots the temperature (T, in degrees Kelvin, on the y axis) at which superconductivity sets in as more and more charge vacancies, or "holes," are doped into the material (horizontal, x axis). On the underdoped side of the "dome" (left), as more holes are added, the transition temperate increases to a maximum of 94 K, but as more holes are added, the transition temperature drops off. The red dashed line represents previously assumed dependence of superconductivity "dome," while the black line represents the correct dependence, obtained from the new data (black dots). This was the first time scientists were able to create highly overdoped samples, allowing them to explore the part of the phase diagram shaded in yellow where superconductivity disappears. Tracking the disappearance may help them understand what causes superconductivity to occur in the first place. Credit: Brookhaven National Laboratory

"Until this study, nothing past that point was known because we couldn't get crystals doped above that level. But our new data takes us to a point of doping way beyond the previous limit, to a point where Tc is not measurable."

Said Valla, "That means we can now explore the entire dome-shaped curve of superconductivity in this material, which is something that nobody has been able to do before."

The team created samples heated in a vacuum (to produce underdoped material) and in ozone (to make overdoped samples) and plotted points along the entire superconducting dome. They discovered some interesting characteristics in the previously unexplored "far side" of the phase diagram.

"What we saw is that things become much simpler," Valla said. Some of the quirkier characteristics that exist on the well-explored side of the map and complicate scientists' understanding of high-temperature superconductivity—things like a "pseudogap" in the electronic signature, and variations in particle spin and charge densities—disappear on the overdoped far side of the dome.

Scientists enter unexplored territory in superconductivity search
Brookhaven Lab physicists Tonica Valla and Ilya Drozdov in the OASIS laboratory at Brookhaven National Laboratory. Credit: Brookhaven National Laboratory

"This side of the phase diagram is somewhat like what we expect to see in more conventional superconductivity," Valla said, referring to the oldest known metal-based superconductors.

"When superconductivity is free of these other things that complicate the picture, then what is left is superconductivity that perhaps is not that unconventional," he added. "We still might not know its origin, but on this side of the , it looks like something that theory can handle more easily, and it gives you a simpler way of looking at the problem to try to understand what is going on."

More information: I. K. Drozdov et al, Phase diagram of Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ revisited, Nature Communications (2018). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-07686-w

Journal information: Nature Communications

Citation: Scientists enter unexplored territory in superconductivity search (2018, December 6) retrieved 20 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2018-12-scientists-unexplored-territory-superconductivity.html
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