Breakthrough Room Temperature Superconductor Turns Out Not To Be

Ever since the spooky phenomenon of superconductivity was discovered in 1911, scientists have been searching for superconducting materials that work under practical conditions

If only they could find a compound in which electrical resistance vanishes at room temperature and ambient pressure – not extreme cold and ultrahigh forces – then we could finally step into the world they envisage of ultrafast computer chips, levitating trains, and superefficient energy grids.

For a hot minute, it looked like 2023 was going to be the year where physicists’ pursuits broke through the room-temperature barrier. But those hopes – which were doused in skepticism from the start – were dashed not once, but twice in the space of a few months.

Now, the findings from a team of materials scientists at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) have been peer-reviewed, putting another nail in the coffin of LK-99, the material a South Korean team claimed in July was a room-temperature superconductor.

If you’ve been following the LK-99 saga, you’ll have been through a rollercoaster of emotions the past few months as scientists scrambled to replicate the South Korean team’s extraordinary claims – and were ultimately left wanting.

LK-99 consists of copper, lead, phosphorus and oxygen, and the South Korean team claimed (in two preprints, neither peer-reviewed) that the electrical resistance of the material dropped sharply as it cooled from a rather toasty 105 °C (378 K).

Near-zero resistance is one of two key properties of superconductivity; the other being the way magnetic fields are expelled from superconducting materials in what’s known as the Meissner effect, causing them to levitate above magnets.

A series of preprints published just weeks after the news of LK-99 first broke brought those claims about LK-99’s purported superconductivity crashing back down to Earth.

One preprint describing LK-99’s chemical structure said that structure made superconductivity infeasible. Other experiments suggested ferromagnetism, not superconductivity, was behind LK-99’s off-kilter, partial levitation.

A third preprint, from Shilin Zhu and colleagues at the CAS Institute of Physics, suggested LK-99’s purported superconductive properties were actually due to impurities in the material – in particular, copper(I) sulfide. That study has now been peer-reviewed, adding weight to its conclusions.

“A surge in misleading information about LK- 99 call[ed] for urgent clarification of its superconductivity,” the researchers write.

To recap, Zhu and colleagues synthesized two kinds of LK-99 with different copper(I) sulfide (Cu2S) content and investigated the samples’ material properties.

Firstly, they showed the electrical resistance of Cu2S alone plummeted around 112 °C (385 K) and they saw a similar effect in LK-99 samples with lots of copper sulfide impurities.

That ‘transition’ temperature is not far off 105 °C – the temperature at which the South Korean team reported LK-99’s superconductivity properties emerged.

But Zhu and colleagues argue that LK-99’s superconductor-like properties most likely originate from the Cu2S, which morphs from a hexagonal structure to a monoclinic one near 126 °C (400 K). Their impure LK-99 samples also didn’t show zero resistivity like a true superconductor would.

This “strongly suggests that the superconductivity-like behavior in LK-99 reported by Lee et al. is caused by the structural phase transition of the impurity Cu2S” the researchers write.

Soon after Zhu and colleagues shared these findings as a preprint in August, other researchers not involved in the work told Nature they thought things were “pretty decisively settled” and LK-99 was not a room-temperature superconductor.

Now that Zhu and colleagues’ findings have passed peer review, it would seem more researchers agree.

See more here sciencealert.com

Header image: Tom’s Hardware

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Comments (6)

  • Avatar

    Howdy

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    The fabled lead into gold. Still practiced, even symbolically, but not possible.

    Reply

    • Avatar

      Howdy

      |

      It can treat you with a vengeance
      Trip you in the dark
      Sirens in the distance
      Can steer you from the path
      It can lift you to the heavens
      Put your troubles in the past
      Whisper the elixir
      Then vanish in a blast

      It’s a mystery, oh, it’s a mystery
      I’m still searching for a clue
      It’s a mystery to me
      A shot in the dark
      The big question mark in history
      Is it a mystery to you?

      It’s a mystery – Toyah Willcox

      Reply

  • Avatar

    Joe

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    The Communist Chinese Academy of Sciences are a bunch of outright liars.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Joe

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    Clare Watson writes for Mainstream Media….the same people who said the Jabs are safe and affective

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Jerry Krause

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    Hi PSI Readers,

    I questioned what ‘journal to which this research’s results had been been submitted. For I initially did not recognize that this journal title was “arXiv”. Hence the only difference between arXiv and PSI is who founded it and supports it. For found this: “Together, Cornell University, the Simons Foundation, members, affiliates, sponsors, foundations, and individual donors contribute to arXiv’s operating budget.” Except, I know the PSI articles can be previewed by its readers. Which, given what I have read, seems unlikely in the case of arXiv.

    Have a good day,

    Reply

  • Avatar

    ChoppedDog

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    Here, I thought would be an article concerning Graphene Oxide.

    Distract right, distract left.

    Throw a stink bomb in the middle just for good measure.

    It’s “Safe & Effective” by golly.

    We’ve really got that new modified batch of Patented Bioweapon Injections seriously working…”Safe & Effective”…this time.

    Reply

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