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Korean team claims to have created the first room-temperature, ambient-pressure superconductor

Hamartia Antidote

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A team of physicists affiliated with several institutions in South Korea is claiming to have created the elusive room-temperature/ambient-pressure superconducting material. Their work has not yet been peer reviewed. They have posted two papers on the arXiv preprint server.

Scientists around the world have been trying for more than a century to find a type of material that would conduct electricity without resistance—discovery of such a material would revolutionize the electricity business because it would mean that electricity would no longer be lost to heat dissipation as it moves along power lines. It would also revolutionize the electronics business because engineers would no longer have to worry about heat dissipation causing problems in devices.

In their two papers, the research team describes the new material, which they call LK-99, and how it was created. It was made, they report, by a solid-state reaction between lanarkite (Pb2SO5) and copper phosphide (Cu3P). The reaction, they claim, transformed the mixture into a dark gray, superconductive material.

In their papers, the team claims to have measured samples of LK-99 as electricity was applied and found its sensitivity fell to near zero. They also claim that in testing its magnetism, it exhibited the Meissner effect—another test of superconductivity. In such a test, a sample should levitate when placed on a magnet. The team has provided a video of the material partially levitating. They claim that the levitation was only partial because of impurities in their material.

The papers by the research team have generated much excitement and skepticism in the science community. There have been other instances of researchers claiming to have found room-temperature/ambient-pressure superconductors over the past several years—all have failed to live up to their claims. The researchers on this new effort have responded to such skepticism by suggesting that others repeat their efforts to test their findings.

If their claims turn out to be true, the team in Korea will have made one of the biggest breakthroughs in physics history, no doubt leading to revolutionary changes in electronics and certainly Nobel medals for all those involved.
 
I hope it's true. If it is true, it will be the greatest achievement of the 21st century.

The Indians used to similarly claim to have discovered room-temperature, ambient-pressure superconductor before, but in the end it turned out that the Indians were lying.

Indians are used to academic fraud, but Koreans should be more honest than Indians.
 
Don't know much about technology here, but this means superconductor can be made easier right?
 
In the summer of 2018, two physicists at the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore claimed to have created a room-temperature, ambient-pressure superconductor made of gold and silver nanoparticles.

The news took the world by storm at the time, and eventually the world realized that it was a common academic forgery in India.

 
They can get 20 dynamite prize for this achievement.
 
South Korea is the pride of East Asia
 
WAIT
WAIT
This is far far too early to celebrate room temp superconductor.
We have been down this road SEVERAL times before
Later confirmatory attempts to replicate have shown these claims to be bogus.
Nature has turned down SO FAR the publication of this paper.
We need replication of these claims at other Labs and a proper peer review of paper.
These are just claims so far and we have been here several times before.
 
feels like we've been down this road before. Lying American researcher just got bonked for falsifying data.


I hope it's true. If it is true, it will be the greatest achievement of the 21st century.

The Indians used to similarly claim to have discovered room-temperature, ambient-pressure superconductor before, but in the end it turned out that the Indians were lying.

Indians are used to academic fraud, but Koreans should be more honest than Indians.
Only ethnically Indian. He's American through and through working in American University.
 
feels like we've been down this road before. Lying American researcher just got bonked for falsifying data.



Only ethnically Indian. He's American through and through working in American University.

Everybody is saying he is Sri Lankan not American or Indian.


Ranga Dias is a Sri Lankan born physicist who is an assistant professor of at the University of Rochester.

Ranga P. Dias is a Sri Lankan researcher and academic who specializes in condensed matter physics. He is an assistant professor in Mechanical Engineering and Physics and Astronomy at the University of Rochester and a scientist at the Laboratory for Laser Energetics.
 
feels like we've been down this road before. Lying American researcher just got bonked for falsifying data.



Only ethnically Indian. He's American through and through working in American University.
Why are you insulting Indians when a Sri Lankan scientist is the one falsely making superconductivity claims.

I mean you are a racist that hates Indians. Just like Afrikaans hated the blacks in South Africa, you are no different, and one hopes the Chinese do not all behave as you do.
 
A little more patience, a little more faith.
If it succeeds, it will be of great benefit to every human being.

Certainly it will change the world instantly. It is a ceramic though so you won't be immediately re-stringing it between high tension towers without some kind of wrapping. I would assume it would be far far far thinner though.
 
Everybody is saying he is Sri Lankan not American or Indian.




Sri Lankan born, American citizenship.
 

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