Uranium ditelluride
Uranium ditelluride, (UTe2), an unconventional superconductor, discovered to be a superconductor in 2018.[1]
Superconductivity in UTe2 appears to be a consequence of triplet electrons spin-pairing.[2] The material acts as a topological superconductor, stably conducting electricity without resistance even in high magnetic fields.[1]
References
- Seokjin Bae; Hyunsoo Kim; Yun Suk Eo; Sheng Ran; I-lin Liu; Fuhrman, Wesley T.; Paglione, Johnpierre; Butch, Nicholas P.; Anlage, Steven M. (2021). "Anomalous normal fluid response in a chiral superconductor UTe2". Nature Communications. 12 (1): 2644. doi:10.1038/s41467-021-22906-6. PMC 8113495. PMID 33976162.
- "Unconventional superconductor acts the part of a promising quantum computing platform". EurekAlert! (Press release). 15 July 2021.
- Sheng Ran; I-Lin Liu; Yun Suk Eo; Campbell, Daniel J.; Neves, Paul M.; Fuhrman, Wesley T.; Saha, Shanta R.; Eckberg, Christopher; Hyunsoo Kim; Graf, David; Balakirev, Fedor; Singleton, John; Paglione, Johnpierre; Butch, Nicholas P. (2019). "Extreme magnetic field-boosted superconductivity". Nature Physics. 15 (12): 1250–1254. doi:10.1038/s41567-019-0670-x. PMC 8201648. PMID 34131432.
- "'Lazarus Superconductivity' Observed – Rare Phenomenon Called Re-Entrant Superconductivity". SciTechDaily. October 7, 2019.
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