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World's Smallest Superconductor Discovered

arcticstoat writes "One of the barriers to the development of nanoscale electronics has potentially been eliminated, as scientists have discovered the world's smallest superconductor. Made up of four pairs of molecules, and measuring just 0.87nm, the superconductor could potentially be used as a nanoscale interconnect in electronic devices, but without the heat and power dissipation problems associated with standard metal conductors."

4 of 72 comments (clear)

  1. World's smallest superconductor walks into a bar.. by calibre-not-output · · Score: 5, Funny

    The bartender says "We don't serve superconductors in this bar." The world's smallest superconductor leaves without putting up any resistance.

    --
    Nothing lasts forever but the certainty of change.
  2. Critical temperature by Takionbrst · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Doing research in a solid state physics lab, I can tell you that this article is worth nothing without the inclusion of the critical temperature Tc at which the "superconductor" starts working. Given that its some sort of ceramic, its a class II superconductor which means that it could possibly be one of the "high Tc" superconductors, a misleading title because they do still need to be cooled with LN2 (just not liquid helium, a much more expensive/difficult prospect). If their "superconductor" only works at .7 kelvin, it's not very impressive--there are lots of materials that do that. To quote (more or less) one of my lab mates "if I dunked my cat in liquid helium, it would probably begin to superconduct." In summary, the devil is in the details.

    1. Re:Critical temperature by Compuser · · Score: 5, Interesting

      First, this is not a type II. It's not a BCS superconductor at all.
      In fact, given that they do not show Meissner effect, one wonders how they conclude it is a superconductor. Heck, the paper does not even show resistance - just a density of states which is depressed at Fermi level. That could be due to anything (like a CDW). This paper seems like it is full of shit until proven otherwise. I would not pass it if I were the reviewer.

  3. Re:What temperature does this work at though?! by rnaiguy · · Score: 5, Informative

    It needs to be below ~8k (from the article abstract) . Not even liquid nitrogen is enough, need liquid helium.