The arrival of high temperature superconductors
COFFEE_KLATCH · Invited
Abstract
The attainment of high temperature superconductivity has been considered a major advancement of modern science. It was the seminal discovery of the first cuprate high temperature superconductor, the Ba-doped La$_{2}$CuO$_{4}$, with a $T_{c}$ of 35 K in 1986 by Alex M\"{u}ller and George Bednorz of IBM Zurich Lab,\footnote{J. G. Bednorz and K. A. M\"{u}ller, Z. Phys. B 64, 189 (1986).} who were awarded the Nobel Prize in 1987, that ushered in the era of cuprate high temperature superconductivity. It was the first liquid nitrogen high temperature superconductor, YBa$_{2}$Cu$_{3}$O$_{7}$ with a $T_{c}$ of 93 K discovered in 1987 by Paul C. W. Chu, Maw-Kuen Wu and colleagues in the respective groups at the University of Houston and the University of Alabama at Huntsville\footnote{M. K. Wu et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 58, 908 (1987).} that heralded the new era of high temperature superconductivity, drastically changing the psyche of superconductivity research and bringing superconductivity applications a giant step closer to reality. In the ensuing years, many high temperature superconductors have been found, leading to the current record $T_{c}$ of 134 K which was observed by A. Schilling et al.\footnote{A. Schilling et al., Nature 363, 56 (1993).} of ETH in 1993 in HgBa$_{2}$Ca$_{2}$Cu$_{3}$O$_{9-\delta}$ at ambient and later raised to 164 K under 30 GPa by L. Gao et al.\footnote{L. Gao et al., Phys. Rev. B 50, 4260(R) (1994).} In the present talk, I shall briefly recall a few events leading to and during the arrival of high temperature superconductivity. The prospects for future superconductors with higher $T_{c}$ will also be discussed.
*Supported in part by U.S. AFOSR, U.S. DoE through ORNL, U.S. AFRL CONTACT through Rice University, the T. L. L. Temple Foundation, the John J. and Rebecca Moores Endowment, and the State of Texas through TCSUH.
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