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The Record For High-Temperature Superconductivity Has Been Smashed Again (technologyreview.com)

Chemists have found a material that can display superconducting behavior at a temperature warmer than it currently is at the North Pole. The work brings room-temperature superconductivity tantalizingly close.

From a report: The work comes from the lab of Mikhail Eremets and colleagues at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Mainz, Germany. Eremets and his colleagues say they have observed lanthanum hydride (LaH10) superconducting at the sweltering temperature of 250 K, or -23C. That's warmer than the current temperature at the North Pole.

"Our study makes a leap forward on the road to the room-temperature superconductivity," say the team. (The caveat is that the sample has to be under huge pressure: 170 gigapascals, or about half the pressure at the center of the Earth.)

2 of 145 comments (clear)

  1. Well that solved the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    After all, generating that kind of pressure in your computer should be easy.

    1. Re:Well that solved the problem by michelcolman · · Score: 3, Funny

      Well, I can totally see Google, Amazon or Facebook creating a new data center in the center of the earth and drilling a hole down from the North Pole for a cooling line.