this post was submitted on 04 Aug 2023
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Superconductors work because there is one state shared by a bunch of electrons separated by an energy gap from other states they could be in. To put thermal energy into an atom (ie. Resistance), you have to have a big enough shift in energy for all of the electrons to shift out of the state. Kind of like they unionized and you can't give one a pay cut on its own. One way to achieve this is to make a regular material very, very, very cold. Lots of conductors will work, but only at or below liquid helium temperatures. Another way is to find a material where there are only a few ways for electrons to move around and cool it down or squeeze it until there's only one. The latter works at hundreds to thousands of times higher temperature (tens of kelvin rather than millikelvin), but still really cold.
Conductors have a lot of states electrons can be in. It's very easy to get one moving, but as they play pachinko through the atomic lattice they exchange tiny amounts of energy with each other and the rest of the material. Probably not a good candidate unless you're really good at squeezing.
In some ways a high temperature superconductor is more like an insulator or a semiconductor than a regular conductor.
This new material is kinda weird in a few ways. For one, the main mechanism of traditional superconductors making all electrons "the same" so they have that grouping up effect is probably not present according to some very preliminary simulations (cooper pairs). Another is that the effect is limited to movement in one direction.
There's 40 years of history and politics behind the theory, 30 years of experiments behind the leak from the korean project, and the material is very finnicky.