High-temp Superconductors of Silver and Fluorine? 17
jeffredd writes: "Two researchers at Cornell are predicting high-temperature, nearly resistance free, superconducters made of an exotic combination of silver and fluorine. The main thrust of their theory seems to revolve around the fact that even though fluoroargentates have not been found to have superconducting properties, they are very similar to oxocuprates which set the high-temp record back in 1993. This is for the hard-core physics buffs. You can read the details here"
Re:Post please (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Post please (Score:2)
Re:unstable (Score:2)
Yours Yazeran
Plan: To go to Mars one day with a hammer.
I wonder if my teeth are superconductive? (Score:1)
Silver Fluoride (the substance the article is talking about) is often used by dentists for fluoride treatments on weakened teeth.
Maybe this explains why my teeth hurt when I eat something really cold. The silver fluoride makes the pain nerves superconduct.
Not silver fluoride - fluoroargentates. (Score:2)
Actually, no. The article talks about a very different type of silver compound.
Silver fluoride has silver as the cation and fluorine as the anion.
A fluoroargentate has something else as the cation (sodium and potassium were mentioned in the article), and AgFx as the anion (AgF3 and AgF4 were mentioned in the article). This is same style of compound as phosphates, nitrates, and so forth, but with an exotic, less stable anion.
nearly resistance free, superconducters ???? (Score:2, Interesting)
Aren't all superconductors "resistance-free" by definition? Duh!
In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:1)
Re:In other news... (Score:1)
Re:In other news... (Score:1)
Silver Fluoride in Dental Use (Score:1)
Let's Wait And See (Score:2)
While the theory behind this new, high-level superconductor is very interesting there are two important isssues that should be sorted out before we can start celebrating this new discovery:
So while this is very interesting news for the field of high-temperature superconductors (and also interesting for me as I am a high-school Physics student), my advice is to wait and see. Don't get your hopes up until the results from the practical experiments come out.
It might also be useful to note that there is another compound that has a transition temperature similar to this one. It's a compound of Mercury (although I am unsure which, all constructive suggestions are welcome) and has a transition temperature of around 120K or so.