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Strong New Evidence of
a New, Supersolid, Phase of Matter
30
August 2004-- In the Friday 3 September
2004 issue of Science Express, two physicists from Penn
State University will announce new experimental evidence for the
existence of a new phase of matter, a "supersolid" form
of helium-4 with the extraordinary frictionless-flow properties
of a superfluid.
"Solid helium-4 appears to behave like a superfluid when it
is so cold that the laws of quantum mechanics govern its behavior,"
says Moses H. W. Chan, Evan Pugh Professor of Physics at Penn State. "One of the most intriguing predictions of the
theory of quantum mechanics is the possibility of superfluid behavior
in a solid, particularly solid helium-4, and we have strong experimental
evidence for this behavior," Chan says.
Chan, and his former student and current postdoctoral associate
Eunseong Kim, first announced in the 15 January
2004 issue of the journal Nature their observation of the
superfluid-like behavior of solid helium-4, which they had confined
in a porous glass with pore diameters of several nanometers. In
their current experiment, they observed the same superfluid-like
behavior in samples of bulk solid helium without any confining matrix.
"Our current experiments with bulk solid helium indicate that
the superfluid-like behavior we observed is an intrinsic property
of the solid—not the result of confinement in any particular
porous medium and not a consequence of the large surface area that
accompanies a porous host," Chan explains.
Nobel Laureate Anthony Leggett, who comments on Chan's discovery
in the "Perspectives" section of the journal Science,
illustrates the concept of a supersolid by saying, "Imagine
you take a small solid body—say a coin—set it on the
axis of an old-fashioned gramophone turntable, and set the latter
into slow rotation. Then the coin will rotate with the turntable—won't
it? Not if it is made of solid 4-He (helium-4) . . ." Such
a failure to rotate is characteristic of a superfluid and is known
as "nonclassical rotational inertia," or NCRI. "Leggett
says of Chan's latest research, ". . . the most plausible interpretation,
and the one drawn by the authors, is that NCRI is indeed occurring
. . ."
As in their earlier experiment, Kim and Chan used a laboratory
device called a torsional oscillator, which is like an amusement-park
ride for experimental samples that rapidly rotates back and forth,
to study the rotational property of solid helium. The helium is
contained inside a ring-shaped, or "annular," channel
located inside the sample cell. The researchers introduce helium
gas into the open annular channel under high pressure via a thin
capillary tube. Solid helium forms in the channel when the cell
is cooled below -270 Celsius, or 3 degrees above absolute zero,
under a pressure that exceeds 26 times the normal atmospheric pressure.
Kim and Chan then rotated the sample cell back and forth while cooling
it to the lowest temperature.
"Something very unusual occurred when the temperature dropped
below one-quarter of a degree above absolute zero," Chan says.
"The oscillation rate suddenly became slightly more rapid,
as if some of the helium has disappeared or simply was not participating
in the torsional motion." Kim and Chan found it easy to confirm
that the helium had not disappeared—they just warmed the experimental
cell and found the oscillation returned to the same slower rate.
"The sensible interpretation of the result is that some of
the helium does not participate in the oscillation," Chan explains.
"In other words, solid helium does not behave as an ordinary
solid, but exhibits nonclassical, or reduced, rotational inertia
in the supersolid phase, as described by Tony Leggett."
The researchers conclude that what happened inside the annular
channel in their experimental sample cell is that a small fraction—roughly
1.5 percent—of the helium atoms enter into a state of zero
friction and that this fraction is no longer coupled to the back-and-forth
motion of the sample cell or to the rest of the solid. "This
1.5 percent is the supersolid fraction, and its behavior is identical
to that found for liquid helium entering the superfluid phase, except
that in liquid helium the superfluid fraction is 100 percent at
absolute zero," Chan explains. Kim and Chan found supersolid
behavior in 17 different samples of solid helium at pressures ranging
from 26 atmospheres up to 66 atmospheres.
"What seems certain is that if the interpretation Kim and
Chan give of their raw data is correct (and quite probably even
if it is not!), their experiment will force theorists to revise
dramatically the generally accepted picture of crystalline solid
4-He," Leggett says.
To understand how a supersolid could exist, you have to imagine
the realm of quantum mechanics, the theory that explains many of
the properties of matter. In this realm there are different rules
for the two categories of particles: fermions and bosons. Fermions
include particles like electrons and atoms with an odd mass number,
like helium-3. Bosons include atoms with an even mass number, like
helium-4. The quantum-mechanical rule for fermions is that they
cannot share a quantum state with other particles of their kind,
but for bosons there is no limit to the number that can be in the
identical quantum state. This talent that bosons have for Rockettes-style
coordination leads to the remarkable properties that Chan and Kim
discovered in solid helium-4.
"When we go to a low-enough temperature, thermal energy is
no longer important and this quantum-mechanical effect becomes very
apparent," Chan explains. "In the supersolid phase, the
supersolid fraction of the particles are executing Rockettes-style
coherent superflow around the annular channel, as viewed by the
oscillating sample cell."
Kim and Chan tested their conclusion by performing the experiment
again, but this time they built a new sample cell with a barrier
in the annular channel, blocking its continuous "racetrack"
geometry so that superflow could not take place. "In this experiment,
we observed that the decoupling rate, as measured by the change
in the oscillation rate, decreased by a factor of 60," Chan
reports. "The small residual effect is due to the special property
of a superfluid and supersolid known as the irrotational flow effect.
What is clear is that superflow is indeed interrupted by the barrier
in the annular channel," Chan says.
In addition to Chan's group, a number of other labs and theoretical
groups are gearing up to learn more about the thermodynamic, hydrodynamic,
and other properties of supersolid helium-4.
"We used to think that a solid could not flow, but now we
have discovered that when you cool solid helium to a sufficiently
low temperature it can not only flow, but it actually flows without
friction," Chan says. "The implication of our research
is that we now have to rethink what we mean by a solid."
Chan's research was supported by the Condensed Matter Physics Program
of the National Science Foundation.
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CONTACTS:
Moses Chan: (+1)814-863-2622, chan@phys.psu.edu
Tony Leggett: (+1)217-333-2077, aleggett@uiuc.edu
Barbara Kennedy (PIO): (+1)814-863-4682, science@psu.edu
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