ENERGY TECH
Revealing the mysteries of superconductors
by Staff Writers
Ames IA (SPX) May 10, 2018

Kamal Joshi, Ruslan Prozorov, and Naufer Nusran.

The U.S. Department of Energy's Ames Laboratory has successfully demonstrated that a new type of optical magnetometer, the NV magnetoscope, can map a unique feature of superconductive materials that along with zero resistance defines the superconductivity itself. That unique feature is the Meissner effect, which is the expulsion of the magnetic field during a material's transition to a superconducting state.

"The Meissner effect is the hallmark signature of a true superconductor, which separates it from a hypothetical perfect metal with zero resistance," said Ruslan Prozorov, an Ames Laboratory physicist who is an expert in superconductivity and magnetism at low temperatures.

"That is fine in textbooks and in principle, but in real superconducting materials the Meissner effect is quite complicated. Robust screening of a magnetic field by a superconducting sample and Meissner expulsion upon cooling in a magnetic field can be confused. This effect is actually very weak and fragile and difficult to observe."

Until now, physicists have been able to observe the Meissner effect, but were unable to visualize its spatial distribution in the material and how that might vary between different superconducting compounds.

Now it is possible to map unique and distinguishing features of the Meissner effect, using a very sensitive magnetoscope that takes advantage of the quantum state of a particular kind of an atomic defect, called nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers, in diamond.

While the science behind using NV centers as sensors has been known, scientists at Ames Laboratory wanted to know if the technology could be harnessed for probing magnetic fields with unprecedented sensitivity and good spatial resolution and apply it to studying various magnetic and superconducting materials.

"This technique, which is minimally invasive and extremely sensitive, is implemented in an optical device that operates successfully while samples are at the low temperatures (4 degrees above absolute zero), which is necessary for quantum materials exploration. This was no trivial undertaking," said Prozorov.

A member of Prozorov's group, Ames Laboratory scientist Naufer Nusran, led the development of this unique set-up, and current work used diamond film with NV-centers implanted right beneath the surface to measure larger-scale variation of the magnetic fields.

This is the first scientific paper published measuring the spatial distribution of the Meissner effect using an NV magnetoscope, proving that the technique works and is ready to be deployed to study even more complex problems.

Nusran also partnered with the Center for Nanoscale Materials, a DOE Office of Science user facility at Argonne National Laboratory, to design and fabricate the nanoscale pillars of diamond, each with a single NV center, for the construction of the magnetoscope, which took three years.

Deployment of these sensors, now housed in Ames Laboratory's ultra-low noise Sensitive Instrumentation Facility (SIF), is the next step in research for the Prozorov group in the new lab.

It's already led to some big surprises.

Iron-based superconductors, considered some of the most robust, showed practically none of that "hallmark" Meissner effect.

"This is a big puzzle and we have no explanation," said Prozorov. "It will be an exciting new avenue in research to understand why this happens."

The research is further discussed in the paper,"Spatially-resolved study of the Meissner effect in superconductors using NV-centers-in-diamond optical magnetometry," authored by N.M. Nusran, K. R. Joshi, K Cho, M. A. Tanatar, W.R. Meier, S. L. Bud'ko, P.C. Canfield, Y. Liu, T.A. Lograsso, and R. Prozorov; and published in the New Journal of Physics.


Related Links
Ames Laboratory
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com

ENERGY TECH
A novel voltage peak in the metal nanowire-superconductor hybrid structure
Beijing, China (SPX) May 03, 2018
Superconductivity, known as a quantum state with zero resistance and perfect diamagnetism, has attracted great attention in physical science. Due to the quantum size effect, low dimensional superconducting systems can exhibit novel behaviors different from bulk situation. Particularly, the investigations on strong spin-orbit coupling or ferromagnetic nanowires with superconducting contacts have become a research highlight in connection with the exploration of topological superconductivity and topo ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

ENERGY TECH
Israel missiles hit Syria military bases: state media

Saudi air defences intercept two missiles over Riyadh

Aerojet completes hot fire propulsion test for redesigned Kill Vehicle

Lockheed tapped for additional THAAD interceptors

ENERGY TECH
Israeli army says has hit 'dozens' of Iranian military targets in Syria

Iran's ballistic missiles: bone of contention with West

BrahMos Supersonic Cruise Missiles to Feature Indian Quad Launchers

Israel orders Golan shelters open over Iran 'activity' in Syria

ENERGY TECH
Navy contracts with Rolls-Royce for Triton drone engines

Raytheon tapped for upgrades on Gray Eagle drones

Talking UAS market trends with NSR analyst Gagan Agrawal

Lockheed announces first US customer for universal unmanned vehicle control station

ENERGY TECH
Silent Sentry: Protecting Space Communications

Harris tapped for counter communication systems

Russia Launches Heavy Rocket with Military Satellite

India Struggling to Establish Lost Link With Crucial Communication Satellite

ENERGY TECH
BAE Systems tapped for HERCULES recovery vehicles

Marine Corps contracts for enhanced combat helmets

General Dynamics to provide display optoelectronics for U.S. Army

ContiTech to provide Saudi Arabia, Kuwait with Abrams tank parts

ENERGY TECH
BAE welcomes Australian economic plan for defense industry

US to update Saudi artillery for $1.31 billion

74% of French people against weapons sales to Saudi: poll

Mattis wins big with budget victory

ENERGY TECH
Bitter pill for European leaders as Trump abandons Iran deal

Japan's Abe accepts China invite, but no date set

Hanoi demands Beijing withdraw missiles from disputed islands

US, Philippine troops storm ashore in bulked-up drills

ENERGY TECH
A new Bose-Einstein condensate created at Aalto University

Course set to overcome mismatch between lab-designed nanomaterials and nature's complexity

This 2-D nanosheet expands like a Grow Monster

Robot developed for automated assembly of designer nanomaterials