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superconductors (1 Viewer)

karentao77

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There are so many answers for this question but I don't know which answer I am supposed to use.
What temperatures do superconductors work at for both types of superconductors?
 

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There's Type I & Type II superconductors.

Type I superconductors are often just metallic elements but have very low critical temperatures (about 4K)

The latter (Type II) are compounds and are usually ceramic and as a result are brittle however they have higher critical temperatures (about up to +150K). It's cheaper to use Liquid Nitrogen than liquid hydrogen so Type II superconductors are preferred in many cases.

In general, Type II superconductors have greater critical temperatures than Type I superconductors.
 

zingerburger

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I've only heard of the one answer - superconductors work at temperatures near absolute zero i.e. about -273 degrees Celcius.

EDIT: Ahhh yes, of course. I forgot about the Type II conductors.
 
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Hallatia

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what are the implications on society if scientists are successful in making a superconductor which will work at room temperatures?
 

chousta

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Hallatia said:
what are the implications on society if scientists are successful in making a superconductor which will work at room temperatures?
"........a world of endless possibilities....."(very cliche), but there are a vast range of implications, such as technology becoming smaller, and faster. Imagine this on computer, or more specifically in areas such as medicine.

that should get you thinking.

:wave: chousta.
 

Hallatia

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chousta said:
"........a world of endless possibilities....."(very cliche), but there are a vast range of implications, such as technology becoming smaller, and faster. Imagine this on computer, or more specifically in areas such as medicine.

that should get you thinking.

:wave: chousta.
thanks, I came up with most of that, but they all seem like good things to me, I think the question refers to negative ones and I cannot see much negative there
 

xiao1985

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expense of manufacturing it maybe?

most new technologies can be vasty expensive, therefore, it may have some social economic impacts, such as the rich gets richer, poor gets poorer
 

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chousta said:
"........a world of endless possibilities....."(very cliche), but there are a vast range of implications, such as technology becoming smaller, and faster. Imagine this on computer, or more specifically in areas such as medicine.

that should get you thinking.

:wave: chousta.
If Type II superconductors are already fragile (because they're mainly ceramic), imagine how motherly gentle you have to be to a new type of superconductors that would work at room temperature as their molecular structure become even more complex.
 

Hallatia

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f3nr15 said:
If Type II superconductors are already fragile (because they're mainly ceramic), imagine how motherly gentle you have to be to a new type of superconductors that would work at room temperature as their molecular structure become even more complex.
that is a good answer, thanks, I never thought about that, although I always took notice of the fragile thing
 

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