City
Epaper

Scientists make 1st discovery of electronic crystallites in solids

By IANS | Updated: October 16, 2024 21:50 IST

Seoul, Oct 16 A group of South Korean scientists has discovered electronic crystallites in a solid material for ...

Open in App

Seoul, Oct 16 A group of South Korean scientists has discovered electronic crystallites in a solid material for the first time in the world, which is expected to help make progress in studies on high-temperature superconductivity, the science ministry said on Wednesday.

A research team, led by Professor Kim Keun-su at Yonsei University in Seoul, posted a paper, titled "Electronic rotons and Wigner crystallites in a two-dimensional dipole liquid," in Nature, a prominent science journal, according to the Ministry of Science and ICT.

This marks the world's first experimental discovery of the structure, theorised by Hungarian American physicist Eugene Wigner in 1934, reports Yonhap news agency.

Wigner crystal refers to a solid or crystalline formation of a gas of electrons enabled by strong repulsion between electrons at low electron density. Normally, a crystal formation is understood as an attraction between atoms.

"Until now, scientists have had a dichotomous perception of electrons: those with order and those without order," Kim said. "But our research found a third type of electronic crystallites with short-range crystalline order."

The discovery by Kim's team is expected to provide further clues to better understand high-temperature superconductivity and superfluidity, long-standing conundrums in modern day physics.

High-temperature superconductors, materials with critical temperature, are considered to have the potential for creating innovations in the energy, transportation and medical industries as they can be easily cooled with liquid nitrogen.

Superfluids are also known to have potential practical uses in health care, the electronics industry and others.

Kim said his team observed an electronic crystallite, with a size of 1 to 2 nanometers, while measuring the energy-momentum relation of electrons doped from alkali metals through angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and the Advanced Light Source, a specialised particle accelerator at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in the United States.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other Sports'I think we are a very different team and we are going to win it,' says England women's head coach Edwards on T20 WC

NationalAxis My India Exit Poll projects UDF surge in Kerala, NDA lead in Assam, NRC ahead in Puducherry

NationalCourt rejects complaint against Delhi law minister Kapil Mishra

National"TMC's departure is certain": WB BJP President Samik Bhattacharya

InternationalMEA flags fake claims on BRICS, urges public to stay alert against misinformation

Business Realted Stories

BusinessCentre aims $2 trillion export target by 2030-31

BusinessNE: 10 Lumding division stations get ‘Eat Right Station’ tag

BusinessMP pioneers in Green Bond-funded solar power in Jalud

Business'Future-ready Indo-Pacific': Amitabh Kant hails India-New Zealand FTA; praises Minister Goyal, McClay

BusinessKhargone solar plant a ‘national achievement’: MP CM