IBM Honors the 25th Anniversary of High-Temperature Superconductivity
– IBM scientists, J. Georg Bednorz and K. Alex Muller, discovered the first successful high- temperature superconductor using a breakthrough ceramic material
– In October 1987 they were awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics — just one year after its discovery
– The discovery is today being
ZURICH, April 18, 2011 — Twenty-five years ago IBM (NYSE: IBM) scientists, J. Georg Bednorz and K. Alex Muller altered the landscape of physics when they observed superconductivity in an oxide material at a temperature 50 percent higher(1), (-238 deg C, -397 deg F) than what was previously known. This discovery opened an entirely new chapter in the field of physics and earned them the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1987.
Their now seminal paper titled, “Possible High Tc Superconductivity in the Ba – La – Cu – O System”(2) was received by the peer-reviewed journal Zeitschrift fur Physik B on 17 April 1986.
This remarkable discovery, of an unlikely new class of materials that were previously abandoned, created a frenzy of activity by physicists who envisioned exciting new applications in measurement technology, electrotechnology and microelectronics.
“This discovery is quite recent – less than two years old – but it has already stimulated research and development throughout the world to an unprecedented extent,” Taken from the speech of Professor Gosta Ekspong of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences at the Nobel Prize award ceremony on 10 December 1987(3).
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Superconductivity Turns 100
Superconductivity was discovered in 1911 by Heike Kamerlingh Onnes, a Dutch physicist, and to this day it is still one of the most dramatic phenomena that occurs in physics. It arises when some metals, such as tin or lead, are cooled to a temperature within a few degrees of absolute zero -273.15 deg C, (-459.67 deg F). For comparison, the coldest temperature ever recorded on Earth is -85 deg C (-121 deg F).
When this happens, an electric current can flow perfectly through the material, with zero resistance — thus no energy is lost in the form of heat. At the time of its discovery scientists were already speculating its use for the transmission of electricity, which was still decades away from being applied outside of the lab environment.
A key test to check for superconductivity in materials is called the Meissner effect. In conducting the test, scientists cool the material in a small magnetic field below its superconducting state and observe how the field lines are expelled from its bulk. The related impressive result is the levitation of a small permanent magnet above such a superconductor.
Discovery Ignites Activity Worldwide
For more than 75 years most scientists had only dreamed of finding a material that remains superconducting above -253.15 deg C (-423.67 deg F) and during this time progress was very slow. Even when new materials were discovered, the most promising being metals, they only improved temperatures by a fraction of a degree.
Then in 1983 IBM scientists Bednorz and Muller concentrated on oxides which include copper and one or more of the rare earth metals. Their breakthrough idea was that the copper atoms could be made to transport electrons, which interact more strongly with the surrounding crystal than they do in normal electrical conductors. To obtain a chemically stable material, the two scientists added barium to crystals of lanthanum-copper-oxide to produce a ceramic material that eventually became the first successful high-temperature superconductor.
Their discovery created a fever of activity with scientists around the world. This activity reached its boiling point at the American Physical Society meeting in New York City, 16-20 March 1987. Nicknamed the “Woodstock of Physics”(4) by some the 2,000 attendees, the marathon session saw more than 50 scientists present their discoveries of newly formulated materials that achieved dramatically higher temperatures than ever before — all based on the discovery by Bednorz and Muller.
Applications Today
The discovery of high-temperature superconductivity is currently being applied and tested in several scenarios, but we are still years away from broader adoption:
- Energy efficient power cables using high-temperature superconductor (HTS) wire from American Superconductor (NASDAQ: AMSC) are beginning to be used around the world to save energy. In 2008, the longest and first HTS cable was installed on Long Island, New York and is currently transmitting up to 574 MW of electricity – enough to power 300,000 homes. In the Southwestern United States, the Tres Amigas Project is currently underway to connect three power grids in the U.S. and create the nation’s first renewable energy market hub. Additionally, the world’s largest order to date for HTS cables was recently placed by LS Cable in South Korea.
- Magnetic-resonance-imaging scanners (MRI), which can be found at nearly every hospital around the world, use small superconducting magnetic coils to produce a rotating magnetic field, which then creates detailed images of the human body. Manufacturers are studying how HTS can be used to create a new generation of more efficient MRI scanners in the future.
- Magnetic Levitating Trains (Maglev), currently being tested in Asia, use onboard magnets that levitate the train above the steel rails, making trains more energy efficient and faster.
- In the metal processing industry, large machines called billet heaters use electricity to heat metals to 1,100 deg C (2,012 deg F) to soften them before processing. Using HTS, German companies, Bultmann GmbH, in co-operation with Zenergy Power, have developed a magnetic billet heater that is 80 percent efficient, saving the equivalent of 800 barrels of oil per year.
- In Switzerland, engineers at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, designed specialized leads that use HTS wires to connect electromagnets to their power source. This helps scientists to maneuver trillions of protons, traveling close to the speed of light, around the 27 km (16.7 miles) collider.
IBM Centennial: Icons of Progress
The discovery of high-temperature superconductivity is one of IBM’s top 100 milestones that coincides with the celebration of IBM’s Centennial (www.ibm100.com). To mark IBM’s Centennial, the company is highlighting its leading role in transforming business, science and society, while also predicting advances for the next century.
The high-temperature superconductivity icon depicts a stylized schematic of the perovskite structure that led to the discovery of high-temperature superconductivity (middle) and a photo of the Meissner effect — the object in the middle of the photo of a small permanent magnet levitating over the superconductor substrate (right).
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(1) as measured from absolute zero
(2) An original copy of the paper is available by request
(3) Credit nobelprize.org archives
(4) New York Times, Discoveries Bring a ‘Woodstock’ for Physics, 20 March 1987, James Gleick
CONTACT:
Christopher P. SciaccaIBM Research – Zurich+41 44 72 48 443cia@zurich.ibm.com
J. Michael LoughranIBM Researchmloughra@us.ibm.com1-914-945-1613
Source: IBM
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