This week a lot of physicists have been getting both very excited and very sceptical about a new preprint titled “The First Room-Temperature Ambient-Pressure Superconductor”. So, what’s the deal? 🧵 1/
#Superconductivity #Science #Physics
#Superconductivity is the property of certain materials to have an electrical resistance of zero below a critical temperature. This makes them interesting for a lot of technological applications such as electromagnets, motors, generator, low-loss power cables. Today, the biggest applications are superconducting magnets for MRIs and particles accelerators such as the large hadron collider (LHC) at CERN. 2/
The first ever discovered superconductor was mercury in 1911 - at temperatures below 4 K (-269°C). You can imagine that this temperature is not very practical for applications as you have to constantly cool the material with liquid helium. So ever since solid-state physicists have been trying to find superconductors that work at higher temperatures. We’ve made a lot of progress, e.g. by discovering superconductors that work at liquid nitrogen (much cheaper and easier than helium) temperatures.3/
In 2018 a superconductor was found that works at -23°C BUT only at very high pressures, therefore, not really helping with the practicability. So, finding a material that’s superconducting at normal pressure and room-temperature would be huge not only for physics but also for technology – thus the hype. 4/
However, claims about room-temperature superconductors have been published previously but had to be retracted cause they couldn’t be reproduced (see here for example: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-03066-z). They community seems to have learned from this and seems very cautious. I think we can nonetheless be excited – about hopefully seeing open science in progress. 5/
Stunning room-temperature-superconductor claim is retracted

Retraction undermines the bold claim by physicists who said their material conducted electricity without resistance at 15 ˚C.

The research group uploaded their preprint publicly on arXiv here: https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.12008. Everyone can download and read it. They included detailed instructions on how to fabricate the material. Now, other research groups can not only critically review the claims but also try to reproduce the results. What I read from other scientists (not enough of an expert myself) the synthesis should not be too exotic so we might see results quite soon! 6/6
The First Room-Temperature Ambient-Pressure Superconductor

For the first time in the world, we succeeded in synthesizing the room-temperature superconductor ($T_c \ge 400$ K, 127$^\circ$C) working at ambient pressure with a modified lead-apatite (LK-99) structure. The superconductivity of LK-99 is proved with the Critical temperature ($T_c$), Zero-resistivity, Critical current ($I_c$), Critical magnetic field ($H_c$), and the Meissner effect. The superconductivity of LK-99 originates from minute structural distortion by a slight volume shrinkage (0.48 %), not by external factors such as temperature and pressure. The shrinkage is caused by Cu$^{2+}$ substitution of Pb$^{2+}$(2) ions in the insulating network of Pb(2)-phosphate and it generates the stress. It concurrently transfers to Pb(1) of the cylindrical column resulting in distortion of the cylindrical column interface, which creates superconducting quantum wells (SQWs) in the interface. The heat capacity results indicated that the new model is suitable for explaining the superconductivity of LK-99. The unique structure of LK-99 that allows the minute distorted structure to be maintained in the interfaces is the most important factor that LK-99 maintains and exhibits superconductivity at room temperatures and ambient pressure.

arXiv.org
@Svenja_Lohmann According to PubPeer, the quality of the paper seems very poor, the chemistry ... exotic? and results doubtful. Unfotunately, seems to be another dud :-/
@buerviper For me it shows zero comments? (Which is a bit weird, so maybe just an error???)
@Svenja_Lohmann Yeah it's weird; when I searched it on pubpeer, it showed nothing, but my pubpeer browser extension showed comments on the article. Here's the link: https://pubpeer.com/publications/82AF24DF343C16341B42CF36B22FA4
PubPeer - The First Room-Temperature Ambient-Pressure Superconductor

There are comments on PubPeer for publication: The First Room-Temperature Ambient-Pressure Superconductor (2023)