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SCs Share Magnetism

New iron-based superconductors share similar unusual magnetic properties with previously known superconducting copper-oxide materials, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has reported.

The superconductors could significantly heighten the efficiency of transferring electricity over the electric grid or storing electricity in off-peak hours for later use, said the NIST. It conducted initial studies of a new class of high-temperature superconductors discovered earlier this year.

“While we still do not understand how magnetism and superconductivity are related in copper-oxide superconductors,” said NIST Fellow Jeffrey Lynn at the NIST Center for Neutron Research (NCNR), “our measurements show that the new iron-based materials share what seems to be a critical interplay between magnetism and superconductivity.”

Part of the team that determined the magnetic and crystal structure of an iron-based superconductor with the NIST Center for Neutron Research instrument used for the experiment. From left: Jeffrey Lynn (NIST), William Ratcliff II (NIST), Pengcheng Dai (University of Tennesee, Knoxville/Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Qing Huang (NIST) and Clarina de la Cruz (University of Tennessee Knoxville). (Photo courtesy NIST) 

The importance of magnetism to high-temperature superconductors is remarkable because magnetism strongly interferes with conventional low-temperature superconductors, he said. “Only a few magnetic impurities in the low-temperature superconductors sap the superconducting properties away."

By contrast, copper-oxide superconductors, discovered in 1986, tolerate higher magnetic fields at higher temperatures. The highest performance copper-oxide superconductors conduct electricity without resistance when cooled to "transition temperatures" below 140 K (-133 ° C) and can simply and cheaply be cooled by liquid nitrogen to 77 K (-196 ° C).

Japanese researchers discovered earlier this year that a new class of iron-based superconducting materials also had much higher transition temperatures than the conventional low-temperature superconductors. The discovery sent physicists and materials scientists into a renewed frenzy of activity reminiscent of the excitement brought on by the discovery of the first high-temperature superconductors over 20 years ago, the NIST said in a statement.

"Earlier work on the copper-oxide superconductors revealed that they consist of magnetically active copper-oxygen layers, separated by layers of nonmagnetic materials. By 'doping,' or adding different elements to the nonmagnetic layers of this normally insulating material, researchers can manipulate the magnetism to achieve electrical conduction and then superconductivity," it said.

"The group of scientists studying the iron-based superconductors used the NCNR, which uses intense beams of neutral particles called neutrons to probe the atomic and magnetic structure of the new material. As neutrons probed the iron-based sample supplied by materials scientists in Beijing, they revealed a magnetism that is similar to that found in copper-oxide superconductors: layers of magnetic moments -- like many individual bar magnets -- interspersed with layers of nonmagnetic material."

Lynn said the layered atomic structure of the iron-based systems, like the copper-oxide materials, makes it unlikely that these similarities are an accident.

One of the exciting aspects of these new superconductors is that they belong to a comprehensive class of materials where many chemical substitutions are possible, the NIST said. "This versatility is already opening up new research avenues to understand the origin of the superconductivity and should also enable the superconducting properties to be tailored for commercial technologies."

Working with the NIST were researchers from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville; Oak Ridge National Laboratory; University of Maryland; Ames Laboratory; Iowa State University; and the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Beijing National Laboratory for Condensed Matter Physics.

The research appears in the advance online publication of the journal Nature (May 28).

For more information, visit: nist.gov

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