Research team takes big step towards making a Bose metal
- March 4, 2025
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
No Comments
Research team takes big step towards making a Bose metal
Sub: Sci
Sec: Msc
Introduction
- A Bose metal is an anomalous metallic state (AMS) with unique electrical properties.
- It is a state where Cooper pairs exist but do not condense into a superconductor.
- This makes Bose metals a significant area of research in condensed matter physics.
Conductivity in Metals
- Metals conduct electricity due to free-moving electrons in a lattice of atomic nuclei.
- Conductivity varies with temperature:
- At room temperature (20ºC), zinc has a conductivity of 16.9 million siemens per meter.
- At -272.3ºC, zinc becomes a superconductor with infinite conductivity.
Superconductivity and Cooper Pairs
- Superconductors exhibit zero resistance below a critical temperature.
- At low temperatures, electrons pair up due to weak attractive forces, forming Cooper pairs.
- These pairs undergo a phase transition, leading to superconductivity.
Anomalous Metallic States (AMS)
- Some metals improve their conductivity at low temperatures but do not become superconductors.
- They conduct electricity via Cooper pairs instead of electrons but lack long-range superconducting coherence.
- This state is termed a Bose metal.
Bose Metal: A Challenge to Traditional Theories
- Classical theories suggest that at absolute zero, metals should either:
- Become superconductors (infinite conductivity) or
- Become insulators (zero conductivity).
- A Bose metal defies this expectation by maintaining a conductivity between zero and infinity.
Recent Research on Bose Metals
- Until now, Bose metals were only theoretically predicted.
- On February 13, 2025, researchers from China and Japan found strong evidence of a Bose metal in niobium diselenide (NbSe₂).
Role of Magnetic Fields
- Superconductors expel magnetic fields when cooled below their critical temperature.
- Type-II superconductors like NbSe₂ allow magnetic fields to enter in isolated pockets.
- When a 2D version of NbSe₂ is subjected to a specific magnetic field, it exhibits properties of a Bose metal.
Experimental Findings
- Researchers used Raman spectroscopy to confirm the presence of Cooper pairs in non-superconducting NbSe₂.
- Hall resistance vanished as the thickness of NbSe₂ increased, indicating charge transport via Cooper pairs instead of electrons.
Theoretical Implications
- The study suggests AMS is characterized by fluctuating local pairing that does not condense into superconductivity.
Findings challenge existing theories about:
- Superconducting pockets in non-superconducting materials.
- Coexistence of superconducting and non-superconducting phases.
Future Prospects
- Bose metals currently lack practical applications.
- However, they provide a rich playground for physics research, which could drive future technological advancements.