Neutron probe yields break in superconductor mystery
Call it a break in the case of "hidden order and
the unconventional superconductor." Writing in the journal Nature
Physics, U.S. and Canadian researchers report a major step toward
solving a two-decades-old materials science mystery and progress
toward the ultimate goal of engineering materials optimized for
magnetic and electric properties.
The advance is the result of investigative work
done at the National Institute of Standards and Technology's Center
for Neutron Research (NCNR), and at the National High Magnetic Field
Laboratory (NHMFL) at Florida State University (FSU).
Stray magnetic fields suppress superconductivity,
the resistance-free passage of electric current. But the object of the
team's scrutiny - a uranium-ruthenium-silicon compound (URu2Si2)
- somehow accommodates the normal adversity between magnetism and
superconductivity. At 17.5 degrees above absolute zero, once-nomadic
electrons that had roamed freely about the compound's lattice-like
atomic structure - and generated their own magnetic fields - behave in
a more orderly and cooperative fashion. This coherence sets the stage
for superconductivity.
URu2Si2 belongs to a class of
materials called heavy fermions, known to be reluctant superconductors.
This is because current-carrying electrons in the intermetallic
material interact with surrounding particles and truly gain from the
experience. The association adds mass - making the electrons behave as
though they were a few hundred times more massive than "normal." The
heavy electrons once were thought to make superconductivity impossible.
However, numerous heavy fermion superconductors now
are known, and URu2Si2 ranks among the most
curious of the lot.
Unexplained was how a "hidden order" suddenly arose
in the wake of the magnetic instabilities caused by the roving
electrons, each one spinning and producing its own miniature magnetic
field. With neutron probes, researchers managed to track electron
movements and determined that the wandering particles work out an
unexpected accommodation in the spacing of their energy levels.
This research is supported by the National
Science Foundation, NIST, the Natural Sciences and Engineering
Research Council of Canada, the State of Florida and the Canadian
Institute for Advanced Research.
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