|
 |
 |

RESEARCH
Science
Physics
Metallic phase for bosons implies
new state of matter
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
(217) 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
10/9/03
 |
Phase
diagram showing the destruction of superconductivity: 1)
The yellow region represents the ordered phase in which
all the electron pairs share the same phase (all arrows
pointing up), 2) The elusive bose metal is in blue in which
all the phases are disordered but form a glass, and 3) Beyond
the electron pairs fall apart and form an insulator. The
vertical
axis represents temperature and the in-plane axes any of
the tuning parameters that destroy superconductivity such
as defects or magnetic
field. |
|
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— The Heisenberg uncertainty principle places severe constraints
on the subatomic world. To illustrate, for particles called bosons,
the principle dictates that bosons either condense to form a superconductor
or they must remain localized in an insulator. However, experiments
conducted during the last 15 years on thin films have revealed a third
possibility: Bosons can exist as a metal. Scientists have been struggling
to interpret this surprising result.
“The conventional theory of metals is in crisis,” said Philip
Phillips, a professor of physics
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. “The observation
of a metallic phase for bosons directly contradicts conventional wisdom.
A satisfactory explanation requires a new state of matter.”
Writing in the Oct. 10 issue of the journal Science, Phillips and Denis
Dalidovich – a former graduate student now working at Florida
State University – analyze the thin-film experiments and offer
a new explanation in which the charge-carrying bosons condense into
a glass-like, metallic state.
Normally, the charge carriers in metals are electrons – fermions
that are subject to the Pauli exclusion principle, which limits the
number of carriers that can occupy the same quantum state. In a superconductor,
however, the charge carriers are pairs of electrons – bosons –
that need not obey the Pauli exclusion principle. As a result, macroscopic
occupation of a single quantum state is allowed.
“Like musicians in a marching band, bosons in a superconductor
all march in step with one another – that is, they have the same
phase,” Phillips said. “When they march out of step, the
result is an insulator.”
In the experiments (performed at Stanford and the University of Minnesota)
that Phillips and Dalidovich analyzed, a thin-film superconductor was
transformed into an insulator either by decreasing the film thickness
or by applying a perpendicular magnetic field. The signature of a superconductor
is zero resistance, while the signature of an insulator is infinite
resistance.
“But in these experiments, there was a wide range where the resistance
was neither zero nor infinite – it was a finite value that seemed
to persist all the way down to zero temperature,” Phillips said.
“And if you have a finite resistivity at zero temperature, that
is called a metal.”
According to the conventional theory of metals, “that metallicity
shouldn’t be there,” Phillips said. “So these experiments
that destroy superconductivity, but don’t immediately produce
an insulator, pose a serious theoretical question.”
Over the years, new states of matter have been proposed that had exotic
magnetic or topological textures associated with the bosons. But these
states lacked a key property of a metal – finite conductivity
at zero temperature. A better explanation for the intervening metallic
phase is that bosons are condensing into a glass-like state.
Glasses are inherently dynamical objects, Phillips said. “They
look solid, but there is no crystalline structure and therefore no true
ground state. Bosons moving in such a glassy environment fail to localize
because no unique ground state exists.”
To illuminate what such a state looks like, consider again the marching
band proceeding up a very long hill, Phillips said. The musicians will
tire at different rates and fall out of step. But the new marching patterns
will propagate through the band. While the band as a whole is out of
step, there will be local regions of order where groups of musicians
still march in step at the same rate.
“In a similar fashion, when you disrupt the phases in a superconductor,
you don’t end up immediately with an insulator,” Phillips
said. “Instead, you have a dynamic system in which the phases
have local order while overall there is disorder.” Such an intermediate
phase in which there is local order but global disorder lies outside
the conventional rubric.
The researchers’ findings are relevant to topological glasses
in general, including the much-studied vortex glass state that has been
argued to have zero resistance and to explain the ground state of high-temperature,
copper-oxide superconductors in a perpendicular magnetic field.
“Recent experiments by researchers at Maryland and Caltech show
that the resistivity does not vanish in the vortex glass state,”
Phillips said. “The resistivity remains finite, so it now appears
that the vortex glass is metallic and not a superconductor, consistent
with the glassy Bose metal proposed.” This agreement lends further
credence to the glassy model proposed to explain the strange Bose metal
state of matter.
Funding was provided by the American Chemical Society and the National
Science Foundation.
|
 |
 |
|