Electrons that spin synchronously around their axis, turn out to stay superconductive across large distances within magnetic chrome dioxide. Electric current from these electrons can flip small magnets, and its superconductive version could form the basis for a hard drive without energy loss. In Leiden in 1911, Nobel Prize winner Heike Kamerlingh Onnes discovered the principle of superconduction; electric current flowing through ice-cold metal without any resistance, ie you can transport electricity or run an electromagnet without energy loss—an essential asset for MRI scanners, maglev trains and nuclear fusion reactors.
Half a century later, electrons appeared to form pairs, enabling the (super) current to escape the classical rules of electricity. Physicists assumed that both electrons spin around their axis in opposite directions, so that the pairs have a net ‘spin’ of zero. Around the turn of the century, that assumption proved to be premature. Super currents can indeed have a net ‘spin’, and with that possibly manipulate small magnets.
Leiden physicist Prof. Jan Aarts and his group have now created a wire made of chrome dioxide, which only carries currents with ‘spin’. They cooled it to a superconducting state and measured a particularly strong current of a billion A/m2. That’s powerful enough to flip magnets, potentially facilitating future hard drives without energy loss. Moreover, the super current covered a record distance of 600nm. This seems like a small stretch: bacteria are bigger, but it lets electron pairs live long enough to work with. http://www.physics.leidenuniv.nl/index.php?id=11573&news=991&type=LION&ln=EN
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