Uranium rhodium germanium

Grenoble High Magnetic Field Laboratory, published in August 2005's issue of Science, that uranium rhodium germanium (URhGe) is the first discovered metal that becomes superconducting in the presence of an extremely strong electromagnetic field. Very unlike other superconducting materials, whose superconducting properties can be lost due to strong magnetic fields, uranium rhodium germanium actually regains superconducting abilities at about 8 teslas.

Process

URhGe's critical temperature (Tc) is normally about 280 millikelvins.

The Grenoble team in France, headed by Andrew D. Huxley, first cooled down the sample below its critical temperature and raised the magnetic field to 2 T. As expected, the sample's superconducting properties vanished. However, when the team raised the magnetic field to 8 T, the superconducting behavior continued. The critical temperature at that field strength increased to about 400 millikelvins. The sample retained the superconducting state until 13 T. They also found that at 12 T, the URhGe sample experienced a magnetic phase transition.

gollark: ^
gollark: <@378840449152188419> You never complained about a giant floating cube made of cloud.
gollark: Cool.
gollark: Also, what stuff is there in the Wolf Mall?
gollark: Chervilpaw = 5cn = Lemmmy = nagoL2015 = 🌵

References

  • Levy, F.; Sheikin, I; Grenier, B; Huxley, AD (2005). "Magnetic Field-Induced Superconductivity in the Ferromagnet URhGe". Science. 309 (5739): 1343–6. Bibcode:2005Sci...309.1343L. doi:10.1126/science.1115498. PMID 16123293.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.