Scientists Create Room Temperature Superconductor
StarEmperor writes "A team of Canadian and German scientists have fabricated a room-temperature superconductor, using a highly compressed silicon-hydrogen compound. According to the article,"The researchers claim that the new material could sidestep the cooling requirement, thereby enabling superconducting wires that work at room temperature.""
Really.. I'm not just saying that.
"I'm so moist I'm sticking to the leather." -Kermit the Frog on The Late Late Show
So how long before we get to pay several hundred dollars for high-pressure, superconducting HDMI cables that take our HD viewing to the "next level"...and also spontaneously ignite if they are chewed on by the family pet?
The hard part's done: We found a supercompressed gas (boiling point -161F) that superconducts. The next step now involves finding something electrically similar (think lead oxide + aluminum versus iron oxide + aluminum. Ignite iron oxide + Al and get Aluminum Oxide and iron and heat; ignite lead oxide + aluminum and get deadly lead gas + aluminum oxide + about 50 times more heat). Find the right chemical properties (solid until 500C?) on an electrically similar compound and you got yourself a deal.
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No, but I suspect that this will still be a huge breakthrough, because we're generally better at keeping things pressurized than at keeping them cold. We have many, many static, high-pressure system with high reliability, but not that many super-cooled ones because cooling requires active energy expenditures.
God damn you for the headline "Scientists Create Room Temperature Superconductor". I almost fell of my chair in excitment. Then my climax was rapidly stolen when I read that it required high pressures. Next time, try to replace typical news sensationalistic headlines with pertinant headlines. In this case "Scientists Create Room Temperature but High Pressure Superconductor".
The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than the question of whether a submarine can swim.
- Efficient motors (think electric cars and perhaps even airplanes and boats);
- Zero loss of power while sending it all over North America (or Europe, Asia, etc).
- Heck, we are looking at hitting coppers limits. If this comes to be, then the use of copper will decrease and we will see a drop in price of that. The amount of copper that goes into large motors is pretty big.
- Just thinking about it, it might even be used for electric storage.
- Maglevs might become practical.
Besides, think of where we were 20 years ago; roughly 20 years ago, physicists had found a way to increase the temp. Those wires are now being used for short distance tranmissions. This could change everything.I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
I suppose you live you in the Physics Fun house.
He we have our frictionless room....
Oh and over here is our pride and joy, a room that maintains a constant temperature and volume.
Comments like this make me realize the importance of nuclear war. We have to come to do something about overpopulation. AIDS isn't spreading fast enough.
I don't see why superconducting wires of these silanes couldn't be kept pressurized by containment inside a fullerene jacket, at macroscopic lengths.
Once superconductors don't require huge apparatus for cooling or even pressure, I expect labs will make superconducting semiconductors less exotic.
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make install -not war
The problem is most people don't finish college, therefore the politicians are doing what the masses want. The problem isn't the politicians--it's the masses.
Cool! Amazing Toys.