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Home NEWS Science News Chemistry

University of Houston Physicists Set New Record for Superconductivity Temperature

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
March 10, 2026
in Chemistry
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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University of Houston Physicists Set New Record for Superconductivity Temperature
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In a landmark achievement that reverberates through the scientific community, physicists at the Texas Center for Superconductivity and the University of Houston have shattered the longstanding temperature record for superconductivity under ambient pressure. This breakthrough promises to accelerate the development of technologies that could revolutionize energy generation, transmission, and storage by substantially reducing energy loss and improving efficiency.

The research team, led by eminent physicists Ching-Wu Chu and Liangzi Deng, have demonstrated a superconducting transition temperature (Tc) of 151 Kelvin—equivalent to approximately minus 122 degrees Celsius—accomplished at normal atmospheric pressure. This milestone surpasses the previous record-holder, a mercury-based copper oxide superconductor known as Hg1223, which exhibited superconductivity at 133 Kelvin under similar conditions. Since superconductivity’s initial discovery in 1911, achieving higher transition temperatures has been the Holy Grail of condensed matter physics, as higher Tc materials broaden the practical applicability of superconductors by obviating the need for prohibitively expensive and complex cooling methods.

Superconductivity’s defining characteristic is the complete disappearance of electrical resistance, allowing current to flow unimpeded through a material. This phenomenon empowers a variety of high-impact applications such as ultra-efficient power grids, highly sensitive magnetic resonance imaging systems, and systems for fusion energy generation. Still, most known superconductors require extremely low temperatures, often maintained by liquid helium or nitrogen, constraining their widespread adoption. The University of Houston team’s advance brings the scientific community a step closer to ambient temperature superconductivity, potentially transforming how electricity is harnessed and utilized globally.

The research, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, employs a sophisticated technique known as pressure quenching, a methodology inspired by similar processes used in material synthesis like diamond creation. Firstly, the team applies intense pressure to enhance the superconductor’s properties, elevating its intrinsic transition temperature while under compression. They then cool the material to a specific temperature before rapidly releasing the pressure, effectively “locking in” the enhanced superconducting state so that these improved properties persist even after the material returns to ambient conditions.

“This work bridges a critical gap by stabilizing high-temperature superconductivity at normal pressure,” explained Professor Chu, who has long been a pioneer in the field following his seminal 1987 discovery of high-temperature superconductivity in yttrium barium copper oxide (YBCO) at 93 Kelvin. That discovery catalyzed decades of research leading to superconductors capable of functioning at progressively warmer conditions, but none had previously managed to maintain such properties without the continuous application of high pressure.

Assistant Professor Liangzi Deng emphasized the broader implications of this technique for future research. “The ability to maintain enhanced superconductivity at ambient pressure facilitates the use of conventional experimental setups for detailed characterization and accelerates the path toward practical applications,” he stated. As the material’s performance no longer hinges on maintaining extreme conditions, manufacturers and engineers can envision scalable uses in energy-efficient technologies.

The significance of this development cannot be overstated. Conventional electrical grids lose nearly eight percent of generated electricity en route to consumers, mainly due to resistance in conductors. Should superconductivity at higher temperatures become commonplace, grid transmission losses could be drastically curtailed, translating into billions of dollars in savings and a substantial reduction in environmental impacts related to power generation.

The discovery also resonates with ongoing efforts to develop next-generation fusion reactors, where superconducting magnets play a crucial role in stabilizing plasma. Enhanced superconductors that operate closer to ambient conditions could dramatically reduce the complexity and cost of magnetic confinement systems, accelerating the realization of viable fusion power plants.

Superconductors also hold promise in revolutionizing electronic devices by enabling ultra-fast and energy-efficient circuits. The newfound stability of high-Tc states at normal pressure opens avenues for innovative electronics and magnetic sensor technologies that no longer require cumbersome cooling.

Prior to this integral contribution, pressure-induced enhancements in superconductivity necessitated maintaining the applied pressure, a condition incompatible with many technological applications. This advance’s methodological ingenuity lies in preserving the high-Tc superconducting phase after depressurization, an enduring challenge that the team has overcome through meticulous control of the pressure-temperature quenching parameters.

Moreover, the researchers’ findings have spurred accompanying theoretical and methodological discussions. A companion paper published alongside the main study details a spectrum of six techniques to tune superconducting materials toward higher transition temperatures. It underscores pressure quenching as an especially promising method, offering a strategic blueprint for researchers pursuing room-temperature superconductivity.

Despite the considerable progress, a gap remains between the newly achieved 151 Kelvin Tc and the coveted goal of room-temperature superconductivity at approximately 300 Kelvin. Bridging this chasm will require sustained, interdisciplinary collaboration, combining insights from material science, chemistry, physics, and engineering. The breakthrough, however, demonstrates that higher-temperature ambient pressure superconductors are within reach, galvanizing the scientific community to intensify efforts toward this transformational objective.

Intellectual Ventures, a visionary global invention and investment entity, funded the research, reflecting a growing recognition within industry and investment sectors of superconductivity’s transformative potential. The collaborative synergy between academia, industry, and government resources highlights the urgent and broad interest in overcoming the practical limitations of superconductive phenomena.

In summary, this unprecedented work by the University of Houston team marks an electrifying advancement in superconductivity research. By pushing past the historical barriers of transition temperature and stabilizing superconductivity under everyday conditions, the pathway toward next-generation energy infrastructure and transformative technologies has become clearer. The scientific frontier of room-temperature superconductivity is no longer a distant aspiration but an achievable future, with profound implications for the global economy and environment.

Subject of Research: Superconductivity at ambient pressure and enhanced transition temperature through pressure quenching techniques

Article Title: University of Houston researchers break temperature record for ambient-pressure superconductivity

News Publication Date: March 9, 2024

Web References:

Original research: https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2536178123
Companion perspective paper: https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2520324123
Intellectual Ventures: https://www.intellectualventures.com/

Image Credits: University of Houston

Keywords

Superconductivity, High-temperature superconductors, Electrical resistance, Pressure quenching, Transition temperature, Ambient pressure superconductors, Energy transmission, Electrical grids, Fusion energy, YBCO, Hg1223, Energy storage

Tags: 151 Kelvin superconductivityambient pressure superconductorsChing-Wu Chu superconductivityenergy-efficient power transmissionhigh-temperature superconductivity breakthroughLiangzi Deng researchmercury-based copper oxide superconductorspractical applications of superconductorssuperconducting materials developmentsuperconducting transition temperature recordTexas Center for SuperconductivityUniversity of Houston physics research

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