By David Nutt, Cornell University|
September 21, 2020 -- Until
now, the history of superconducting materials has been a tale of two types:
s-wave and d-wave.
Now, Cornell researchers – led by Brad Ramshaw, the Dick & Dale Reis
Johnson Assistant Professor in the College of Arts and Sciences – have
discovered a possible third type: g-wave.
Their paper, “Thermodynamic Evidence
for a Two-Component Superconducting Order Parameter in Sr2RuO4,” published
Sept. 21 in Nature Physics. The lead
author is doctoral student Sayak Ghosh, M.S. ’19.
Electrons in superconductors move
together in what are known as Cooper pairs. This “pairing” endows
superconductors with their most famous property – no electrical resistance –
because, in order to generate resistance, the Cooper pairs have to be broken
apart, and this takes energy.
In s-wave superconductors – generally
conventional materials, such as lead, tin and mercury – the Cooper pairs are
made of one electron pointing up and one pointing down, both moving head-on
toward each other, with no net angular momentum. In recent decades, a new class
of exotic materials has exhibited what’s called d-wave superconductivity, whereby
the Cooper pairs have two quanta of angular momentum.
Physicists have theorized the existence
of a third type of superconductor between these two so-called “singlet” states:
a p-wave superconductor, with one quanta of angular momentum and the electrons
pairing with parallel rather than antiparallel spins. This spin-triplet
superconductor would be a major breakthrough for quantum computing because it
can be used to create Majorana fermions, a unique particle which is its own
antiparticle.
For more than 20 years, one of the
leading candidates for a p-wave superconductor has been strontium ruthenate
(Sr2RuO4), although recent research has started to poke holes in the idea.
Ramshaw and his team set out to
determine once and for all whether strontium ruthenate is a highly desired
p-wave superconductor. Using high-resolution resonant ultrasound spectroscopy,
they discovered that the material is potentially an entirely new kind of
superconductor altogether: g-wave.
“This experiment really shows the
possibility of this new type of superconductor that we had never thought about
before,” Ramshaw said. “It really opens up the space of possibilities for what
a superconductor can be and how it can manifest itself. If we’re ever going to
get a handle on controlling superconductors and using them in technology with
the kind of fine-tuned control we have with semiconductors, we really want to
know how they work and what varieties and flavors they come in.”
As with previous projects, Ramshaw and Ghosh used resonant ultrasound
spectroscopy to study the symmetry properties of the superconductivity in a
crystal of strontium ruthenate that was grown and precision-cut by
collaborators at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids in
Germany.
However, unlike previous attempts,
Ramshaw and Ghosh encountered a significant problem when trying to conduct the
experiment.
“Cooling down resonant ultrasound to 1
kelvin (minus 457.87 degrees Fahrenheit) is difficult, and we had to build a
completely new apparatus to achieve this,” Ghosh said.
With their new setup, the Cornell team
measured the response of the crystal’s elastic constants – essentially the
speed of sound in the material – to a variety of sound waves as the material
cooled through its superconducting transition at 1.4 kelvin (minus 457 degrees
Fahrenheit).
“This is by far the highest-precision
resonant ultrasound spectroscopy data ever taken at these low temperatures,”
Ramshaw said.
Based on the data, they determined that
strontium ruthenate is what’s called a two-component superconductor, meaning
the way electrons bind together is so complex, it can’t be described by a
single number; it needs a direction as well.
Previous studies had used nuclear
magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to narrow the possibilities of what kind
of wave material strontium ruthenate might be, effectively eliminating p-wave
as an option.
By determining that the material was
two-component, Ramshaw’s team not only confirmed those findings, but also
showed strontium ruthenate wasn’t a conventional s- or d-wave superconductor,
either.
“Resonant ultrasound really lets you go
in and even if you can’t identify all the microscopic details, you can make
broad statements about which ones are ruled out,” Ramshaw said. “So then the
only things that the experiments are consistent with are these very, very weird
things that nobody has ever seen before. One of which is g-wave, which means
angular momentum 4. No one has ever even thought that there would be a g-wave
superconductor.”
Now the researchers can use the
technique to examine other materials to find out if they are potential p-wave
candidates.
However, the work on strontium ruthenate
isn’t finished.
“This material is extremely well studied
in a lot of different contexts, not just for its superconductivity,” Ramshaw
said. “We understand what kind of metal it is, why it’s a metal, how it behaves
when you change temperature, how it behaves when you change the magnetic field.
So you should be able to construct a theory of why it becomes a superconductor
better here than just about anywhere else.”
Co-authors include researchers from the
Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids; the National High Magnetic
Field Laboratory at Florida State University; and the National Institute for
Materials Science in Tsukuba, Japan.
https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2020/09/researchers-identify-new-type-superconductor
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