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Eugene

(61,872 posts)
Thu Sep 29, 2022, 01:06 AM Sep 2022

'Something is seriously wrong': Room-temperature superconductivity study retracted

Source: Science Magazine

‘Something is seriously wrong’: Room-temperature superconductivity study retracted

After doubts grew, blockbuster Nature paper is withdrawn over objections of study team

26 SEP 2022 11:00 AMBYERIC HAND

In 2020, Ranga Dias, a physicist at the University of Rochester, and his colleagues published a sensational result in Nature, featured on its cover. They claimed to have discovered a room-temperature superconductor: a material in which electric current flows frictionlessly without any need for special cooling systems. Although it was just a speck of carbon, sulfur, and hydrogen forged under extreme pressures, the hope was that someday the material would lead to variants that would enable lossless electricity grids and inexpensive magnets for MRI machines, maglev railways, atom smashers, and fusion reactors.

Faith in the result is now evaporating. On Monday Nature retracted the study, citing data issues other scientists have raised over the past 2 years that have undermined confidence in one of two key signs of superconductivity Dias’s team had claimed. “There have been a lot of questions about this result for a while,” says James Hamlin, an experimental condensed matter physicist at the University of Florida. But Jorge Hirsch, a theoretical physicist at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD), and longtime critic of the study, says the retraction does not go far enough. He believes it glosses over what he says is evidence of scientific misconduct. “I think this is a real problem,” he says. “You cannot leave it as, ‘Oh, it’s a difference of opinion.’”

The retraction was unusual in that Nature editors took the step over the objection of all nine authors of the paper. “We stand by our work, and it’s been verified experimentally and theoretically,” Dias says. Ashkan Salamat, a physicist at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and another senior member of the collaboration, points out the retraction does not question the drop in electric resistance—the most important part of any superconductivity claim. He adds, “We’re confused and disappointed in the decision-making by the Nature editorial board.”

The retraction comes even as excitement builds for the class of superconducting materials called hydrides, which includes the carbonaceous sulfur hydride (CSH) developed by Dias’s team. ...

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Read more: https://www.science.org/content/article/something-seriously-wrong-room-temperature-superconductivity-study-retracted

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'Something is seriously wrong': Room-temperature superconductivity study retracted (Original Post) Eugene Sep 2022 OP
This has happened before. PoindexterOglethorpe Sep 2022 #1
There is a financial motivation behind their publicity campaign and irreproducible data dalton99a Oct 2022 #2

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,848 posts)
1. This has happened before.
Thu Sep 29, 2022, 01:49 AM
Sep 2022

I'm pretty sure I remember reading about room temperature superconductivity a decade or so ago, that also turned out to be bogus.

Apparently, room temperature superconductivity isn't a thing. Any claims to the contrary are wrong.










dalton99a

(81,451 posts)
2. There is a financial motivation behind their publicity campaign and irreproducible data
Sun Oct 2, 2022, 01:09 PM
Oct 2022
Dias and Salamat are not slowing down. The duo has co-founded a company, Unearthly Materials, to pursue commercial room-temperature superconductors. At conferences this summer, Dias has presented claims of superconductivity in new hydride compounds. Although he declined to comment on those claims until they are published, he says, “We’ve moved on from the 2020 work.” Salamat adds, “We’re on the precipice of a new era of high-temperature superconductivity.”

https://www.science.org/content/article/something-seriously-wrong-room-temperature-superconductivity-study-retracted

Dias is an internationally recognized scientist in the field of high pressure physics, and his work has also been reported in popular press, e.g. New York Times, BBC, NBC, NPR, Physics Today, New Scientist, Chemistry World, Science News, and Nature News and Views.

https://www.hajim.rochester.edu/me/people/faculty/dias-ranga/index.html
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