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Plutonium-based superconductivity with a transition temperature above 18 K

J. L. Sarrao (), L. A. Morales, J. D. Thompson, B. L. Scott, G. R. Stewart, F. Wastin, J. Rebizant, P. Boulet, E. Colineau and G. H. Lander
Additional contact information
J. L. Sarrao: Los Alamos National Laboratory
L. A. Morales: Los Alamos National Laboratory
J. D. Thompson: Los Alamos National Laboratory
B. L. Scott: Los Alamos National Laboratory
G. R. Stewart: Los Alamos National Laboratory
F. Wastin: Institute for Transuranium Elements
J. Rebizant: Institute for Transuranium Elements
P. Boulet: Institute for Transuranium Elements
E. Colineau: Institute for Transuranium Elements
G. H. Lander: Los Alamos National Laboratory

Nature, 2002, vol. 420, issue 6913, 297-299

Abstract: Abstract Plutonium is a metal of both technological relevance and fundamental scientific interest. Nevertheless, the electronic structure of plutonium, which directly influences its metallurgical properties1, is poorly understood. For example, plutonium's 5f electrons are poised on the border between localized and itinerant, and their theoretical treatment pushes the limits of current electronic structure calculations2. Here we extend the range of complexity exhibited by plutonium with the discovery of superconductivity in PuCoGa5. We argue that the observed superconductivity results directly from plutonium's anomalous electronic properties and as such serves as a bridge between two classes of spin-fluctuation-mediated superconductors: the known heavy-fermion superconductors and the high-Tc copper oxides. We suggest that the mechanism of superconductivity is unconventional; seen in that context, the fact that the transition temperature, Tc ≈ 18.5 K, is an order of magnitude greater than the maximum seen in the U- and Ce-based heavy-fermion systems may be natural. The large critical current displayed by PuCoGa5, which comes from radiation-induced self damage that creates pinning centres, would be of technological importance for applied superconductivity if the hazardous material plutonium were not a constituent.

Date: 2002
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DOI: 10.1038/nature01212

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