Technology 3 min read

Frustrated Graphene Electrons in Andreev States Exhibit Exotic Superconductivity

Rendering of Graphene's Atomic Structure | Antoine2K | Shutterstock.com

Rendering of Graphene's Atomic Structure | Antoine2K | Shutterstock.com

In the search for the most efficient superconductor, physicists have discovered new, intriguing properties by enhancing graphene with added superconductors.

Superconductive materials are already used in medical diagnosis. In MRI instruments, for example, they allow the generation of a powerful and stable magnetic field. In the future, superconductors, which carry a supercurrent with zero resistance, would also be used to make power storage facilities and power lines hyper-efficient.

Frustrated graphene in an Andreev state exhibits exotic superconductivity.Click To Tweet

Magnetic-levitation is another potential application (one that could be used with a hyperloop system). Superconductive magnets would transport vehicles with zero friction.

Recently, scientists at the University of Cambridge have found a way to unleash graphene’s superconducting capabilities. Now, MIT scientists have taken graphene’s superconductive property to the next level.

Superconductivity’s Proximity Effect: Andreev States

MIT physicists have demonstrated that graphene can achieve a whole new type of superconductivity, and the trick is bringing graphene into contact with two other superconductors.

“MIT physicists have found that a flake of graphene, when brought in close proximity with two superconducting materials, can inherit some of those materials’ superconducting qualities. As graphene is sandwiched between superconductors, its electronic state changes dramatically, even at its center. Pictured is the experimental concept and device schematic.” | Taken from Phys.org | Massachusetts Institute of Technology

The team of researchers, whose findings were published in the journal Nature Physics, exfoliated a chunk of graphite to get a tiny, few hundred nanometers wide flake of graphene. On a platform, they placed the flake between two electrodes made from aluminum, which at low temperature behaves like a superconductor. Then, using a dilution refrigerator, they cooled the structure to 20 millikelvin (about -460° F), to activate the superconductivity property of aluminum.

This process radically altered the electron state of the graphene that, instead of behaving as individual and scattered particles, paired up and flew along as a supercurrent, i.e., without energy dissipation.

Frustrated Graphene Electrons Flow Into a Supercurrent

MIT scientists relied on a phenomenon called “Andreev states,” which is an electronic configuration that enables the traditionally non-superconducting materials to carry an electric current that flows without dissipating energy.

“Electrons in a superconductor dance harmoniously in pairs, like a ballet, but the choreography in the left and right superconductors can be different,” said Landry Bretheau, co-author of the study. “Pairs in the central graphene are frustrated as they try to satisfy both ways of dancing.”

Unlike electron pairs in conventional superconducting materials, graphene electrons get frustrated because of the superconducting layers (aluminum in this case) that exert two opposite forces: they are pulled in two different directions and get stuck in the middle. It’s these ‘frustrated graphene electron pairs’ that carry the supercurrent and bestow graphene with superconductivity qualities.

The study of MIT team is the first attempt to investigate the ‘frustrated states’ (Andreev states) arising from the superconductivity proximity effect.

First AI Web Content Optimization Platform Just for Writers

Found this article interesting?

Let Zayan Guedim know how much you appreciate this article by clicking the heart icon and by sharing this article on social media.


Profile Image

Zayan Guedim

Trilingual poet, investigative journalist, and novelist. Zed loves tackling the big existential questions and all-things quantum.

Comments (0)
Most Recent most recent
You
share Scroll to top

Link Copied Successfully

Sign in

Sign in to access your personalized homepage, follow authors and topics you love, and clap for stories that matter to you.

Sign in with Google Sign in with Facebook

By using our site you agree to our privacy policy.