In a laboratory in Leiden in 1911, Dutch physicist Heike Kamerlingh Onnes discovered a phenomenon that defied the known laws of physics: superconductivity.
While measuring the properties of mercury at temperatures near absolute zero, he observed that its electrical resistance did not just decrease—it vanished entirely, transforming the metal into a perfect conductor.
Achieving this effect at room temperature has since become a "philosopher’s stone" for science, promising a world of perfect energy efficiency, loss-free power grids, and high-speed levitating trains.
Despite over a century of research, the quest for room-temperature superconductivity remains a daunting frontier characterized by extreme trade-offs.
Recent breakthroughs have achieved superconductivity at higher temperatures, but only by subjecting materials like "red matter" to the colossal pressures found inside diamond anvil cells.
These materials lose their near-perfect properties the moment the pressure is released, making them currently useless for practical applications like circuits or wires.
The field now faces a critical dilemma: finding a way to retain these favorable structures through clever chemistry at ambient pressure, a challenge that may require a new kind of partner in the discovery process.
Fler avsnitt av Quarks to Cosmos
Visa alla avsnitt av Quarks to CosmosQuarks to Cosmos med TheTuringApp.Com finns tillgänglig på flera plattformar. Informationen på denna sida kommer från offentliga podd-flöden.
