Superconducting Breakthrough May Change the Chip Industry Dramatically

“If the 20th century was the century of semiconductors, the 21st can become the century of the superconductor.” 

That is how professor Mazhar Ali, head of a Delft University of Technology research team, puts their scientific breakthrough. Published in Nature, the discovery concerns superconductors, which are a class of materials that offers loss-free electrical conductivity. The research demonstrates that superconductors too can be made to only carry electrical current in a single direction — something that was previously thought impossible. The discovery may ultimately allow for electronics to become not only more efficient but also more performant by factors of hundreds, perhaps even unlocking the terahertz era, no less. 

Superconductors are materials that carry current without any resistance. This means (all things being equal) that signals don't lose their integrity and there is no energy loss in the form of heat - irrespective of the actual physical distance separating the signal's origin and destination points - even if you were to measure it in Astronomical Units (AUs). 

The scientists solved this by replacing classical components of Josephson Junctions, which are used to break material symmetry. To do so, they deployed a novel quantum material - which are essentially classical materials that have been manipulated (or shaved) towards their minimal possible size (usually only as thick as the molecules themselves). The scientists call their new design “Quantum Material Josephson Junctions” and have based it on the quantum material Nb3Br8. 

Like graphene, Nb3Br8 is a 2D material that the research team theorized could be host to a net electric dipole - a particularly useful structure that allows for the superconducting symmetry to be broken. Due to this material, the researchers could now control the flow of current on their superconducting material, ordering the electron chaos towards having a "forward" path, where electrons can happily skim through the superconductor without any resistance, and a "backward" direction, the one scientists didn't want their free-moving electrons to go towards.

Imagine having a piece of velvet in your hands. If you trace a finger in the direction of the fibers, you're met with little to no perceivable resistance. But if you go against the fibers, the soft feel is largely gone - there's a difference between directions.

But another element to this research is the type of performance increase superconductors can unlock compared to their traditional semiconductor counterparts (which, you guessed it, only deliver a part of the original current towards the destination due to the material's natural electrical resistance). According to Mahzar Ali, this new scientific breakthrough could pave the way for a transformative evolution in the chip manufacturing industry. Technology that has only been achieved with semiconductors can now potentially be made with superconductors - delivering up to 300 to 400 times the operating frequencies of classical materials. Ultimately, he said, the possibility is real for all sorts of societal and technological applications.

As in all research — and especially the revolutionary kind — there is still a lot of work to be done before this translates into actual products. For now, the scientists are focused on reducing the operational temperature of their design. The aim is to achieve so-called “High Tc Superconductors” which would allow the Josephson diodes to operate at temperatures of 77 Kelvin (-192 ºC), high enough for cooling to be taken care of by liquid nitrogen, already used to enable the world's most impressive overclocking records on some of the Best CPUs and Best GPUs.

Francisco Pires
Freelance News Writer

Francisco Pires is a freelance news writer for Tom's Hardware with a soft side for quantum computing.

  • InvalidError
    Superconductors are materials that carry current without any resistance. This means (all things being equal) that signals don't lose their integrity
    Signal integrity would still be an issue with superconductors since you still get magnetic and capacitive coupling along with transmission line attenuation from dielectric losses and leakage. The only thing superconductors eliminate is resistive losses.
    Reply
  • Kamen Rider Blade
    Get this working in a mass produced commercial products first, then we'll talk.

    Right now, its just a lab discovery.
    Reply
  • Kridian
    Yeah, chop-chop. No more talk!
    Oh, and let's fix the cancer thing once and for all too. k/thanks
    Reply
  • beliberdah
    For now, the scientists are focused on reducing the operational temperature of their design.
    Did you mean increasing?
    Reply
  • Geef
    The single underlined word below is how you know know nothing has happened, just another Fusion is only 20 years away! story.
    Superconducting Breakthrough May Change the Chip Industry Dramatically.
    I MAY be a billionaire tomorrow.

    You MAY win the lottery next week.
    Reply
  • jkflipflop98
    Yeah, these will be rolling out along with optical transistors. In 25 years or so.
    Reply