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Âé¶¹ÒùÔºicists stabilize superconducting states at ambient pressure

UH Âé¶¹ÒùÔºicists Hit Major Milestone in Advancing Superconductor Applications
A multi-purpose measurement device used in the pressure-quenching experiments can reach a temperature of 1.2 K (-457 F). Credit: University of Houston

Researchers at the University of Houston's Texas Center for Superconductivity have achieved another first in their quest toward ambient-pressure high-temperature superconductivity, bringing us one step closer to finding superconductors that work in everyday conditions—and potentially unlocking a new era of energy-efficient technologies.

In their study titled "Creation, stabilization, and investigation at of pressure-induced superconductivity in Bi0.5Sb1.5Te3," in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, professors Liangzi Deng and Paul Ching-Wu Chu of the UH Department of Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics set out to see if they could push Bi0.5Sb1.5Te3 (BST) into a under pressure—without altering its chemistry or structure.

"In 2001, scientists suspected that applying high pressure to BST changed its Fermi surface topology, leading to improved thermoelectric performance," Deng said. "That connection between pressure, topology and superconductivity piqued our interest."

"As materials scientist Pol Duwez once pointed out, most solids that are crucial to industry exist in a metastable state," Chu said. "The problem with that is many of the most exciting superconductors only work under pressure, making them difficult to study and even harder to use in practical applications."

That's where Deng and Chu's breakthrough comes in.

Âé¶¹ÒùÔºicists hit major milestone in advancing superconductor applications
Magnetization Property Measurement System (MPMS) used in ultra-sensitive magnetization measurements. Credit: University of Houston

Using a technique they developed called the pressure-quench protocol (PQP), described in an October UH news release, Deng and Chu successfully stabilized BST's high-pressure-induced superconducting states at ambient pressure—meaning no special high-pressure environments needed.

Why does this matter? It opens up a whole new way to retain valuable material phases that usually only exist under pressure for fundamental research and practical application.

"This experiment clearly demonstrates that one may stabilize the high-pressure-induced phase at ambient pressure via a subtle electronic transition without a symmetry change, offering a novel avenue to retain the material phases of interest and values that ordinarily exist only under pressure," Chu said. "It should help our search for superconductors with higher transition temperatures."

"Interestingly, this experiment revealed a novel approach to discovering new states of matter that do not exist at ambient pressure originally or even under conditions," Deng added. "It demonstrates that PQP is a powerful tool for exploring and creating uncharted regions of material phase diagrams."

More information: Liangzi Deng et al, Creation, stabilization, and investigation at ambient pressure of pressure-induced superconductivity in Bi 0.5 Sb 1.5 Te 3, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025).

Provided by University of Houston

Citation: Âé¶¹ÒùÔºicists stabilize superconducting states at ambient pressure (2025, February 10) retrieved 29 April 2025 from /news/2025-02-physicists-stabilize-superconducting-states-ambient.html
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