| UPTON,
NY -- Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's
Brookhaven National Laboratory have uncovered another
possible clue to the causes of high-temperature superconductivity,
a phenomenon in which the electrical resistance of a
material disappears below a certain temperature. In
a superconducting compound, they found evidence of a
rarely seen arrangement of "holes" -- locations
where electrons are absent. The results appear in the
October 28, 2004, issue of Nature.
The
researchers were studying a compound made of strontium,
copper, and oxygen (which they've dubbed SCO) that
is one of the "cuprates,"
a family of compounds that contain copper oxide. In
SCO, the scientists found evidence of a "hole
crystal" -- a rigid, ordered arrangement of holes.
Holes are positively charged and, like electrons,
may interact with each other to produce a superconducting
current.
"A
hole crystal is a very unusual phenomenon," said
Brookhaven physicist Peter Abbamonte, the study's
lead researcher. "Its existence is a direct result
of the correlations between holes, which are believed
to produce superconductivity in other cuprates."
SCO
consists of one layer of strontium atoms sandwiched
by two sheets of different copper oxides. In one sheet,
the copper-oxide molecules form long, parallel chains.
The other copper-oxide layer, which contains the hole
crystal, has a ladder structure, resembling chains
that are linked horizontally.
A
hole crystal is just one type of arrangement of electric
charge in a material. These arrangements are important
because some researchers believe that superconductivity
is the result of a particular arrangement, or occurs
when a superconductor approaches a boundary between
two arrangements. In other cuprates, for example,
scientists are studying a charge arrangement in which
ribbons of holes and magnetic regions form alternating
"stripes."
"We
believe the hole crystal and stripes may be linked,"
said Abbamonte. "Specifically, the hole crystal
in SCO may be a 'low-dimensional' precursor to stripes,
meaning it exists only along the copper-oxide ladders,
rather than in an entire copper-oxide plane."
He
and his collaborators studied SCO using x-rays from
the National Synchrotron Light Source, a facility
at Brookhaven Lab that produces x-ray, ultraviolet,
and infrared light for research in a variety of scientific
fields. They placed an SCO sample in the path of an
x-ray beam, varied the wavelength of the beam, and
watched how the x-rays reflected away from the sample.
At
a particular energy, the sample reflected back the
x-rays very intensely. The research group discovered
that this reflection was caused by the holes, which
led them to determine that the holes formed an ordered
lattice since randomly placed holes could not have
produced such a strong reflection.
Abbamonte
and his collaborators plan to continue this research
by varying the chemical composition of SCO to see
if it changes the hole crystal. They will also examine
another cuprate to see if its stripes are related
to the crystal.
"Clearly,
more research needs to be done to study these phases
and their possible link to superconductivity,"
said Abbamonte.
The
research was funded by the Office of Basic Energy
Sciences within the U.S. Department of Energy's Office
of Science, the National Science Foundation, Bell
Laboratories, the Dutch Science Foundation, and the
Netherlands Organization for Fundamental Research
on Matter.
One
of the ten national laboratories overseen and primarily
funded by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department
of Energy (DOE), Brookhaven National Laboratory conducts
research in the physical, biomedical, and environmental
sciences, as well as in energy technologies and national
security. Brookhaven Lab also builds and operates
major scientific facilities available to university,
industry and government researchers. Brookhaven is
operated and managed for DOE's Office of Science by
Brookhaven Science Associates, a limited-liability
company founded by Stony Brook University, the largest
academic user of Laboratory facilities, and Battelle,
a nonprofit, applied science and technology organization.
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