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The Engineer
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Is There Anything Silicon Can't Do?

11/24/2006 8:10 PM

Silicon has demonstrated superconductivity at temperatures below .35 K. Researchers replace some of the atoms of Silicon with Boron (9%) in a Silicon crystal to produce the superconductivity.

Boron is widely added to silicon to make it a useful semiconductor, but rarely does it account for more than 0.002% of the total number of atoms. Because it has one fewer electron than silicon available for bonding with neighbouring atoms, boron incorporated into silicon leaves a positively-charged "hole" at each site where boron's "missing" electron would be paired with one of silicon's. At room temperature these holes can move around, making boron-doped silicon a "p-type" semiconductor, but at low temperatures, the holes remain bound in orbitals to the boron nuclei. It has long been known that at boron concentrations of around 0.01% these low-temperature orbitals overlap, making metal-like conductivity possible. However, until now all attempts to make silicon superconducting have failed.

Busterret Etienne at the Centre National de la Recherché Scientifique in Grenoble and colleagues have now tried doping to even higher concentrations in a bid to witness the effect. Because silicon is normally reluctant to allow impurities into its structure, they had to employ a vigorous method called "gas immersion laser doping" that repeatedly melts and cools a thin silicon film using a pulsed laser. During each molten stage, atoms from boron gas diffuse into the film and remain there while it solidifies, ultimately replacing up to 9% of the silicon atoms. The researchers found that below a temperature of 0.35 K, this highly-doped silicon becomes superconducting.

Here is a link to the story.

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Guru
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Re: Is There Anything Silicon Can't Do?

11/27/2006 5:58 AM

All is good, but don't you think 0.35 K is well beyond human limit for all practical purposes.

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