Triplet Superconductor

5 days ago (sciencedaily.com)

"Scientists may have...that ability could...early experiments suggest...if verified, it could..."

I have become jaded with publications that hedge like this. In my experience most of these discoveries never pan out, they just disappear. And not being in the field myself, I don't know how to judge.

Does anyone in quantum computing have a read on how big a deal this is (or isn't)?

  • The gap between the laboratory and the factory is big. A technology usually requires a ton of refinement before it's ready for mass adoption. EVs are a good example.

  • The majority of press releases, from universities, are complete fan fiction. It's so damn disheartening.

    • You should read them as publicity to convince stupid politicians to continue to fund basic research when they are more inclined to go for tax cuts for billionaires. Annoying, but a necessary evil.

The limiting factor for quantum computers is keeping them cold. Is this triple superconductor high temperature too? If not, it's not going to change things much.

  • In QC, keeping cold is not just needed to superconduct, but to reduce thermal noise to level below the energy levels operated at.

  • 7k, kelvin that is, according to the fine article. Very very cold, but better than nothing.

    • I did a bunch of research on similar Tc superconductors back during my PhD.

      7K is considered “warm” from a cryogenics point-of-view because you can just dunk your sample into a dewar of liquid helium at 4.2K. You can even get it cooler, down to about 1K, using evaporative cooling techniques. [1]

      It’s getting to lower temperatures than this when things start getting complicated. Eg a closed-cycle evaporative He3 system can get you down to 200 mK, or you can bite the bullet and use a dilution fridge down to around 10mK.

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1-K_pot

    • Note that liquid Helium boils at 4K, so anything hotter (like 7K) is "easy", where "easy" means "as easy as keeping a NMR working in a Hospital".

      (There are probably a lot of other nasty details, but less than 4K is harder.)