On July 22th 2023, a paper was posted
claiming the creation of a room temperature, ambient pressure superconductor. LK-99. The world is now trying to synthesize
the thing and replicate the paper's findings. The LK-99 Wikipedia
page is keeping a running tally. The quest for a room temperature
superconductor has gone for over a century. It has seen some amazing highs and lows. In this video let us dive into
the dream and track the 100-year history of technological progression
towards this mythical substance. ## Superconductivity Resistance is a material's opposition to
an electric current flowing through it. A conductor has low resistance
and so lets electrons easily move through them. Insulators do not. In previous videos, I have mentioned that all real world materials have some amount of
resistance. Of course, I was not thinking about superconductors - perhaps because I
didn't consider them practical materials. We have known about superconductivity
for over a century now. In 1911, the Dutch physicist and Nobel prize
winner Heike Kamerlingh-Onnes and his students started performing experiments at
super low temperatures using liquid helium. At the time, people speculated
on what might happen to the electrical resistance of metals
as they approached absolute zero. Sir James Dewar - inventor of
the vacuum flask - theorized that electrical resistance would
infinitesimally approach zero. Lord Kelvin on the other hand thought that it
would hit some minimum before quickly rising towards infinity. His reasoning being that the
electrons would stop moving as it gets colder. So Kamerlingh-Onnes did an experiment
with mercury. Why mercury? Because it was the only metal they had
available in sufficient purity. And unexpectedly, the experiment showed
mercury's resistance falling to zero just below 4.2 Kelvin. Kamerlingh-Onnes
named this state "superconductivity". The temperature at which the material achieves
this state is called the "transition temperature". ## Disappointment The first superconductors triggered
a great deal of excitement. It was the electrical engineer's wet dream
- a future free of electrical resistance. In 1913 Kamerlingh-Onnes traveled to Chicago
and spoke of building a helium cooling plant in pursuit of smaller, more efficient
motors or generators using superconductivity. Optimistic, Kamerlingh-Onnes continued his
work. He discovered that lead's transition temperature was 7.2 Kelvin -
slightly higher than mercury. In 1914, he then made a coil of lead wire, froze
it to 7.2 Kelvin and passed an electrical current through it. But to his disappointment,
the coil lost all of its superconducting powers when the magnetic field got to be
about as strong as a horseshoe magnet. As it turns out, superconductivity requires not
only a low enough temperature but also a low enough magnetic field and a low enough amount of
current passing through it - current density. The material can only maintain their superconductivity
if all three sit within the parameters. Today, pure metal or simple alloy
superconductors are known for this fundamental weakness. These are not good
for practical industrial use. After all, electrical systems encounter
magnetic fields all the time. Kamerlingh-Onnes must have been
crushed. He was one of the first scientists to have fallen victim to the sirens
of superconductivity. He would not be the last. ## A Curiosity Research on superconductor
materials then slowed for a decade. The need for liquid helium cooling stood as
a formidable financial barrier to continued commercialization. And there was no
big market need pushing for it either. Many people worked on the concept
simply because it fascinated them. Through them, pioneering science was
done in the 1930s. We discovered three more superconductors - tantalum at
4.4K, thorium at 1.4K, and niobium. Which has the highest transition
temperature yet known at 9.2 Kelvin. In 1933 we discovered the Meissner Effect.
This is where a superconductor expels all magnetic fields as it transitions
into a superconducting state. In other words, the magnetic field
will go around the superconductor material rather than permeate through
it. This explains why all the videos you see of these things are
of them floating on magnets. And then a second major discovery that
went under the radar. In the late 1920s, the Soviet Ukrainian scientist Lev
Shubnikov worked at a cryogenic lab in the Netherlands. In 1930, he returned to
the Soviet Union and continued his research. There, his experiments discovered what are now called Type II superconductors. These
are quite different from the pure metal superconductors - today called "Type I"
- that so disappointed Kamerlingh-Onnes. Type I superconductors fall back to normal
behavior when they breach their magnetic limit. But Type II superconductors can display a mix
of ordinary and superconducting properties at certain magnetic limits. So Type IIs can
potentially be made to be far more tolerant of higher magnetic fields than Type Is. These are
almost always complicated alloys or compounds. Sadly Shubnikov never got to see the benefits
of his work. At the height of the Great Purge in 1937, the NKVD targeted him for his
foreign connections. They arrested him, accused him of espionage and shot him.
It would be many years before the rest of the superconductor community recognized and
capitalized on the significance of his work. ## Post-War World War II had shown the entire
world the economic and military value of turning sciences into technologies. Shortly before the war, MIT professor
Samuel Collins invented the Collins helium liquefier system. Widely introduced after the war, the Collins made liquid helium more
available for superconductor research. Yet the search for higher temperature
superconductors - perhaps even a room temperature one - remained quite
difficult. We did not have good theory to tell us where to look. So most
people started with metals with already low amounts of resistivity -
copper, gold, silver so on. In the early 1950s, a pair of scientists
- B.T. Matthias and John Hulm - took a different approach. They embarked on a
systematic search via experimentation. The two pioneered the method of finding
superconductors via the Meissner Effect - the superconductor’s tendency to expel magnetic
fields. They applied an external magnetic field to a sample as it was being cooled and
measured whether it expelled that magnetic field. Matthias and Hulm systematically
moved through the periodic table, eventually testing over 5,000 compounds. This was how they discovered the
A3B superconductors - 3 niobium atoms and 1 atom of either silicon, tin, or
aluminum. Yes, it is a terrible name. Anyway these would hold the record for the highest
transition temperature - 23 K for 28 years. Matthias eventually formulated the "Matthias
Rules" for finding a superconductor - which like the Pirate Code - are more what
you'd call guidelines than actual rules. Rule number six was "Stay away from theorists!" ## BCS As you might expect, Matthias
looked down on superconducting theory - calling them just "descriptions". But the physics world wanted a theory to
help guide their way forward. And in 1957, three scientists proposed a
theory that did just that. John Robert Schrieffer, Leon Cooper one of the
namesakes of Sheldon Cooper, and John Bardeen. Recognize the name of that last guy?
Bardeen won his first Nobel prize in Physics as one of the three inventors of the
transistor. This theory won him his second. The theory was named BCS -
named after its three inventors. BCS also stands for Bowl Championship
Series. It was a system that helped select the match-ups in top tier
American football college divisions. Cal hasn't won a football championship
since before World War II so I don't know why I cared to mention this. Let's move on. Anyway, BCS theory suggests that when a
material enters a superconducting state, their electrons pair up. This is weird
because normally they repel each other. But in that superconducting state, we
have the influence of a new force called phonons. Phonons are measurable, energized
vibrations in the material's crystal lattice. Thanks to the attractive
forces from these phonons, the electron pairs create a brand
new form called "Cooper Pairs". Cooper Pairs are exempt from
the Pauli Exclusion Principle, which explains why two solid objects can't be
in same place at the same time. And also why all matter does not simply collapse into
a single point despite everything being mostly empty space. I think I asked
my mom that once when I was a kid. Thusly, Cooper Pairs allow these
electrons to act differently than they usually do - traveling through the crystal
lattice without resistance. This part of the theory has generally held over the years -
Cooper Pairs are key to superconductivity. The energy bonds holding these Cooper Pairs are quite weak. So they can be easily
shaken apart by thermal energy. Thus, BCS theory does a good job of explaining
superconductivity at low temperatures. Superconducting materials whose behavior is explainable by BCS theory are known
as "conventional superconductors". By 1960, we knew about 35 elements and
a thousand different alloys to have shown superconductivity under certain conditions. ## Superconducting Wire In 1961, scientists discovered a
series of niobium-based alloys that retained their superconductivity in the
presence of a stronger magnetic field. These were called high-field superconductors.
And they theoretically allowed us to make large superconducting wires that performed
far better than traditional copper ones. Such wires can produce very powerful
magnetic fields using very little power. High-field superconductors achieved the original
dream of Kamerlingh-Onnes many decades ago. But even so, it took the industry until early 1970 to
reliably and viably produce superconducting wire. Such superconducting wires eventually became the widely accepted method for producing
MRIs. MRIs with superconducting wire remain the single biggest and most important
commercial use for superconductor materials. ## The Breakthrough In 1986, two researchers at an IBM lab in Zurich, Switzerland were collaborating
on a study on superconductors. Alex Muller was a senior research fellow at IBM
who received the job basically as a stopover before retirement. He had gotten interested in
the field after spending 20 months in New York. There, he observed IBM's massive
Josephson Computer Technology project. That was a $300 million effort
to build an ultra-fast computer based on superconducting digital logic
switches. It ultimately failed. I will talk about Josephson and his
learnings in a future video about superconducting circuits and their computers. Upon returning to Zurich in 1983, Muller
recruited a colleague Georg Bednorz to look for superconductors in oxides. After a
couple frustrating years searching around, they came across an article from a team
of French scientists describing metal-like electrical conductivity at a rather high
temperature. Like 900 degrees Celsius high. That was interesting. Ceramics are traditionally
known to be electrical insulators. After further experiments, the duo produced a ceramic compound
of barium, lanthanum, copper, and oxygen that achieved superconductivity at 35 Kelvin (-238
degrees Celsius) - a legit breakthrough. As is so often in the land of superconductors,
this discovery came as a total surprise. Bednorz and Muller first kept their results away from
even their colleagues and their employer. They decided to first publish their results
at a small but reputable German physics journal (Zeitschrift fur Physik) apparently
because they personally knew its editor. In April 1986 they submitted the paper, which
was deliberately given a very disarming title: "Possible High Tc Superconductivity
in the Ba-La-Cu-O System". They chose this title because the two were
not sure about their result. For instance, the Meissner effect had not
yet been measured in it. After some time, the paper was finally
published in September 1986. But rumors had been circulating since July, and they shook
the scientific community like an earthquake. Not only because ceramics like as I said
before were not seen to be good conductors. But also Bednorz and Muller were seen as outsiders
to the superconductor community - working in a backwater of the IBM research machine. One
prominent member of the community - jaded by false claims over the years - was tempted to
simply throw the paper away when he first saw it. These new ceramics also violated the previously
established rules of superconductors. It did not follow the Matthias Rules. And not only
that, it highlighted a hole in BCS Theory. By then, physicists had largely adopted
BCS as a reasonably rigorous explanation of superconductivity. And because
BCS only worked at low temperatures, superconductivity in general was regarded as
an exclusively low-temperature phenomenon. This discovery heralded a new class
of ceramic oxide superconductors with higher transition temperatures. Higher
than ever before seen - referred to as "High Temperature Superconductors" or High-T. Research teams around the world raced to
replicate the results. In late November 1986, some 2 months after publication, the Asahi Shinbun
newspaper reported that a team led by Shoji Tanaka of the University of Tokyo had successfully
repeated the experiment, confirming the results. ## Cuprates A few weeks after that, Paul Chu of the
University of Houston replicated the results. Chu's results made the
headlines. More impressively, he believed that there were other materials
with even higher transition temperatures. A race for new superconductors soon
emerged, with the big line being 77 Kelvin, the temperature of liquid
nitrogen. Various groups in Beijing, Tokyo, and the United States
traded papers back and forth. Then in January 1987, Dr. Chu
discovered a superconductor with a transition temperature above 90 Kelvin.
Breaking the so-called nitrogen barrier. Chu held off publishing for as long as possible
as he tried to first patent the material. Finally in February 1987, he announced
his marvelous technical breakthrough. This class of high temperature superconductors
is sometimes called 1-2-3 superconductors because they have 1 atom of Yttrium, 2
atoms of Barium, and 3 atoms of copper. There is also some oxygen attached but
whatever it messes with the cool naming. These things are also more generally
referred to as YBCO superconductors, cuprate superconductors or
rare-earth cuprate superconductors. Oh hey, more rare earths stuff. Wonder
who’s the world leader in those? Anyway, all cuprate superconductors share the same
structure. They are big layered compounds kind of like cakes. Layers of copper-oxygen separated
from one another by insulating oxide layers. The superconductivity happens within
those thin copper-oxygen layers. We aren't exactly sure how it works.
Cooper pairs are probably involved, but differently from how it is in BCS theory
- making them unconventional superconductors. Cuprates broke the nitrogen barrier, which
meant that we can use liquid nitrogen to cool them rather than liquid helium - which is
what we used before. This has significant cost benefits. Liquid nitrogen costs about 50 cents
per gallon while liquid helium, $24 per gallon. On March 15th, the American Physical
Society held a special symposium on high temperature superconductors
specifically to talk about the results. Several thousand physicists gathered at the Hilton
at what they now call the Woodstock of Physics. The highlight was a special evening
session dedicated to the discovery - held on Wednesday night in the Hilton Grand
Ballroom. It was filled to the brink. The session started out at 7 pm and ended
at around 3 am - a magical 8 hours long. ## A Gold Rush A "gold rush" was on for new
materials based on this breakthrough. Superconductor related headlines hit the media
like the New York Times. BusinessWeek cried out, "Superconductors! More important than
the light bulb and the transistor". The fever swept over Japan. Multiple ministries rapidly directed R&D spending
into this new category. By 1988, MITI's single biggest R&D expenditure
was on high temperature superconductors. The United States too. The White
House even held a Presidential Conference on superconductivity in July 1987. Reagan proposed an 11-point plan to build
new industries around this new technology. Tens of millions of dollars of federal
R&D were funneled into superconductors. On the corporate front, IBM and Bell Labs
faced off with one another. They joined the fray alongside a bunch of new startups with buzzy
names like American Superconductor Corporation, Conductus, Illinois Superconductor Incorporated,
and Superconducting Technologies Incorporated. ## Hype Fades The discoveries kept coming throughout 1987. By playing around with the
original barium, lanthanum, copper, and oxygen ceramic formula,
researchers were able to find cuprate superconductors with increasingly
higher transition temperatures. But the gaps between science and technology can
be quite large and take a lot of time to overcome. As it turns out, transition temperature was
only just one of the factors that engineers have to consider when building
commercially viable systems. For instance, take superconducting wires
for MRI machines. The original promise of High-Temperature superconductors was
that we can swap out more expensive liquid helium cooling systems for cheaper
liquid nitrogen ones. Should be Easy right? But as Kamerlingh-Onnes found out long before, superconducting wires need to also be able
to carry high current densities and withstand very high magnetic fields. In other words,
they need to meet the critical parameters. The cuprate high temperature superconductors do
indeed have much higher transition temperatures but their other critical parameters
are not as dramatically higher. There was also a substantial
materials engineering problem. Cuprate superconductors are ceramics
- complicated materials that are very brittle to work with. This by itself
limited their usefulness as a material. They also work differently. If you
recall, the cuprates are layered cakes, and all the superconducting happens within
those single flat layers of copper and oxygen. This imposes big challenges on how we might
achieve this superconductivity. If we want to produce a wire using this material
- it needs to be done in a specific way in order to maintain good alignment
over potentially hundreds of meters. So it took a substantial amount of time
to eventually engineer wire using High Temperature superconductors. They do exist and are used for things like cables for power
usage, but that took years to develop. And there are certain applications where the
High-T cuprate superconductors still fall short of established technologies. Niobium Titanium -
established all the way back in 1970 - continues to dominate superconducting wires for MRIs. Mostly
due to their superior mechanical properties. The slow speed of commercialization
dampened enthusiasm. And unfortunately, high temperature superconductors could not
uncover that golden "killer app" that would stimulate more investment into the space.
Over time the hype receded as it became clear that the cuprates did not present a way
towards room temperature superconductivity. The scientific community did not forget
Bednorz and Muller though. Just 16 months after their discovery, the two won the Nobel Prize in Physics - the record for the fastest
recognition in Nobel physics history. ## Iron & Beyond Superconductor research continued for another high-temperature alternative
to the cuprate superconductors. In 2001, a Japanese team discovered an interesting
non-cuprate superconductor - magnesium diboride. Its transition temperature was 39 Kelvin. Far below the cuprates, but at least
much higher than the traditional low temperature superconductors. Unfortunately its
behavior was conventional BCS, so a dead end. The next significant high temperature
discovery came in February 2008, when Dr. Hideo Hosono reported a Fluorine-doped iron-based superconductor with a
transition temperature of 26 Kelvin. This opened up a new branch of
high temperature superconductors separate from the cuprates. At the
outset, there was a lot of hope. A few months, another iron superconductor was
found with a transition temperature of 56 Kelvin. But progress there has since stalled. And then recently in 2015 a team in
Germany published a paper claiming superconductivity in sulfur hydrides
at over 200 Kelvin and high pressure. Interesting, but again nothing that
has real world industrial implications. And there have been some … questions about
superconductivity in these sulfide hydrides. One recent controversial room temperature claim
was recently retracted by Nature Magazine. ## Conclusion The search continues for a room
temperature superconductor. Or even a relatively high temperature
superconductor with fewer engineering compromises than what we already have. Is LK-99 really it? I don't know. But will
it really change everything if it was? Is it really the next transistor? It
is hard for me to believe that. When we dream of room temperature
superconductors, we talk about things like levitating trains, compact MRIs,
economical fusion energy, and the like. Well, they have been citing these things
since 1986. Many applications are already technically possible with existing
low-temperature superconductors. But there are real economic
reasons why we don't have these. For instance, magnets for Maglev trains. The
magnets are not a significant portion of the financial cost for these machines. It is
tied to the cost of the land, the labor, the extensive planning, and the construction. And then there is always the
chance that a room temperature superconductor - whether LK-99 is it or not
- cannot compete with existing solutions. Look at the MRI. Intuitively, you might think this
new generation of High-Temperature cuprates would sweep out the old superconducting wire tech
used for those MRIs like yesterday's trash. But it turned out to be far more subtle
than that. Even today 30 years later, 80-90% of today's MRI machines are still
made with good old Niobium Titanium. Just working these things into
wires might take years. Remember, these things are layered cakes. Imagine
making a cake hundreds of miles long. Real world applications might be
years and millions of dollars away. But hey, I hope I am wrong. I love the
excitement around LK-99. No matter the outcome, the fascinating science of
superconductivity is having another one of its unique moments. This only happens
ever so often in the world. Let's enjoy it.