Superconductors are materials that conduct electrical current with almost no electrical resistance at all. This property makes them particularly appealing for a variety of applications, including loss-less power cables, electric motors and generators, and powerful electromagnets that can be utilized for MRI imaging and magnetic levitating trains. Nagoya University researchers have now detailed the superconducting properties of a new class of superconducting material, magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene.
Low temperatures are required for a material to behave as a superconductor. In fact, most materials only enter the superconducting phase at extremely low temperatures, such as -270°C, which is lower than the temperature observed in space! Because such substantial cooling necessitates highly expensive and specialized liquid helium cooling equipment, its practical uses are severely limited. This is the primary reason why superconducting technologies are still in their early stages.
High-temperature superconductors (HTS), such as some iron and copper-based ones, reach the superconducting phase above -200°C, a temperature that is more easily attained by cooling a device with liquid nitrogen, which can cool a system down to -195.8°C. However, HTS’s industrial and commercial applications have been limited thus far. HTS materials that are currently known and available are brittle ceramic materials that are not bendable into usable shapes such as wires. Furthermore, they are notoriously difficult and expensive to produce. This makes the quest for novel superconducting materials vital, and it is a major focus of research for physicists like Prof. Hiroshi Kontani and Dr. Seiichiro Onari of Nagoya University’s Department of Physics.
In their work published recently in Physical Review Letters, Prof. Kontani and Dr. Onari use theoretical methods to better understand and shine light on the source of this nematic state in MATBG. “Since we know that high-temperature superconductivity can be induced by nematic fluctuations in strongly correlated electron systems such as iron-based superconductors, clarifying the mechanism and origin of this nematic order can lead to the design and emergence of higher temperature superconductors,” explains Dr. Onari.
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