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A new superconductor said to have zero electrical resistance at room temperature is revealed but scepticism remains

A new superconductor said to have zero electrical resistance at room temperature is revealed but scepticism remains

Superconductivity is creating a buzz again with the announcement of a new material that is said to have zero electrical resistance at room temperature.

The claim, from researchers in Croatia, comes just a few weeks after the discovery that the simple chemical magnesium diboride superconducts at temperatures up to almost twice those needed for other metallic superconductors to work

The Croatian scientists say that current will flow effortlessly through their material, a mixture of lead carbonate and lead and silver oxides, at up to about 30 °C.

"These results are suggestive of a transition to a superconducting state," says Georg Bednorz of the IBM Zurich Research Laboratory, who shared the 1987 Nobel physics prize for discovering cuprate superconductors.

But because of numerous false alarms in this field, researchers are treating the announcement with caution, especially as no one has yet managed to reproduce the results.

Magic formula

Danijel Djurek, a physicist at A. Volta Applied Ceramics in Zagreb, Croatia, claims that he discovered his superconducting ceramic mixture in the late 1980s. But he was unable to pin down the structure and formula of the material, and his research was interrupted by years of war, following Croatia's split from Yugoslavia. Now Djurek and his team say they have finally hit on a formula that works reliably and reproducibly at room temperature.

Some telltale signs of superconductivity are easy to spot. For example, a graph of resistance plotted against temperature shows a characteristic drop at the temperature at which the material becomes superconducting. Physicists usually require other evidence too, such as the ability to expel all magnetic fields. Djurek's material seems to do this too.

Archie Campbell, director of Cambridge University's Interdisciplinary Research Centre in Superconductivity, says the data clearly shows the hallmark of a superconductor. "This is not a small effect. There's no room for misinterpretation," he says, adding it's either superconductivity or it's a mistake.

Nevertheless, all the researchers contacted by New Scientist were extremely reluctant to start popping corks. "I have some concerns which keep my enthusiasm on a moderate level," says Bednorz.

Do it again

The biggest question mark hangs over the failure of other groups to replicate the results. Paul Chu, director of the Texas Center for Superconductivity at the University of Houston, has been following Djurek's work for some time.

"We recently tried to use his new formula but failed to reproduce his results," says Chu. "I think we will try a little more. It's too important to ignore."

The Original Story from: newscientist

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