Anda di halaman 1dari 2

TECHNOLOGY UPDATE

http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/27302
Mar 9, 2007
Superconductivity and magnetism in harmony in a novel nanomaterial
Magnetism and superconductivity are often thought to be incompatible. However,
physicists in the US and France have created a nanoscale structure that contains
both magnetic and superconducting properties at the same time. The results show
a hitherto undocumented interplay between ferromagnetism and
superconductivity and the researchers will be studying the phenomenon at the
Swiss Light Source, at the Paul Scherrer Institute, over the next two years.

The team

According to the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer theory of superconductivity, electrons


with opposite spins form pairs that can move through a material without resistance. A
magnetic field can destroy superconductivity in two ways: by breaking up the electron
pair, or by trying to make both of the electron spins point in the same direction.
These effects also limit how much current can flow through the superconductor
because of the disruptive effect of the magnetic field produced by the current itself.

Last year, Jacques Chakhalian and colleagues at the Max Planck Institute, Germany,
and the University of Grenoble, France, published a paper in Nature Physics,
documenting novel properties at the interface between a superconductor made from
yttrium, barium copper and oxygen and a ferromagnet made from lanthanum calcium
manganese oxide (LCMO). The researchers developed a technique that allowed them
to combine the two materials in one thin-film superlattice, which showed both
superconducting and magnetic properties.
Chakhalian and colleagues now plan to look more closely at the interface between the
two materials using synchrotron light (electromagnetic radiation of varying
wavelengths that can be tuned to a specific wavelength for a particular experiment).
To help them do this, the researchers have been awarded research time and financial
support over the next two years, at the Swiss Light Source – the most advanced
synchrotron light source in the world.
The spectrum at the Swiss Light Source varies from infrared light to soft and hard X-
rays. However, unlike conventional X-rays, which diffuse through space, the light
beams from the synchrotron are sharply focused. The main technical challenge for
Chakhalian and his team will now be to focus the beam of low-energy photons into a
spot the size of a few hundred microns.

The work will open up a new area of physics and could even lead to the discovery of
more materials with both magnetic and superconducting properties, say the
researchers.

Anda mungkin juga menyukai