The Challenge of Unconventional Superconductivity

COFFEE_KLATCH  · Invited

Abstract

In the past few decades, several new classes of superconductors have been discovered. Most of these are unconventional in that they do not appear to be related to traditional superconductors where the order parameter is more or less spatially isotropic. As a consequence, it is felt by many (but not all!) that the cause of superconductivity arises from a different source than the electron-ion interactions that are at the heart of conventional superconductivity. But developing a rigorous theory for any of these classes of materials has proven to be a difficult challenge, and will continue to be one of the major problems in physics in the decades to come. This is particularly true in that if history is any guide, even more dramatic discoveries of unconventional superconductors await us in the future.

*Work supported by the US DOE, Office of Science, under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357 and by the Center for Emergent Superconductivity, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the US DOE, Office of Science, under Award No. DE-AC02-98CH10.

Authors

  • Michael Norman

    • Argonne National Lab
    • Materials Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory
    • Argonne National Laboratory