High-quality helium crystals show supersolid behavior

February 18, 2007

High-quality, single-crystal, ultra-cold solid helium exhibits supersolid behavior, suggesting that this frictionless solid flow is not a consequence of defects and grain boundaries in poor-quality, polycrystalline, solid helium, according to a team of Penn State researchers.

In 2004, Penn state physicists -- Eunseong Kim, then-graduate student and Moses Chan, the Evan Pugh professor of physics-- announced the observance of frictionless superflow in solid helium at nearly absolute zero. This new phenomenon is a cousin of Bose-Einstein condensate observed in gases in 1995 and in liquid helium in 1938.

Since then, their results have been replicated at the University of Tokyo, Keio University, Japan, and Cornell University. While the experiment was duplicated at Cornell, one experiment there found that if the solid helium was annealed – cooled slowly from the melting point – the supersolid behavior disappeared. This suggested that the theoretical idea of supersolidity is possible only in poor-quality solid helium and that the superflow is due to defects in the poorly grown crystals.

To create solid helium, the gaseous helium must be cooled very close to absolute zero and put under at least 25 atmospheres. Unlike other gases, helium remains a liquid at ambient pressure all the way down to absolute zero. Determining that the solid helium acts as a supersolid or Bose Einstein condensate is tricky. In a Bose-Einstein condensate all the atoms are at the lowest possible energy state, and they all behave in unison. The supersolid portion of the crystalized helium appears to flow without friction. For liquids and gases, this idea is less difficult because the atoms of both move around more and can easily slide past each other. But, in a solid, especially a very cold one, atoms do not usually flow easily or without friction.

The researchers relied on inertia to determine that the ultra-cold solid helium had a supersolid component. They did the high-pressure cooling experiment in a tiny torsional oscillator, a pendulum-like setup. Liquid helium, under pressure, entered a small chamber at the end of a thin rod. The liquid then cooled to the solid phase and the torsional oscillator was set at a specific frequency.

With a normal solid, the total mass of the sample would dictate the force required to move the oscillator at a specific frequency and as long as the mass remained the same, the same force would be required to keep the system at the same frequency . In Chan and Kim's experiment, when the temperature went below 0.2 degrees Kelvin, the frequency abruptly increased, indicating that some of the solid helium was not moving with the chamber or with the rest of the solid. "At about 25 atmospheres, the initial pressure we investigated, 1 percent of the helium becomes a supersolid," says Chan. "This supersolid fraction becomes frictionless, allowing the rest of the helium to 'flow' past it."

Cornell, in duplicating this experiment used multiple experimental cells, and in one, the annealing process eliminated the supersolid effect. Tony Clark, graduate student in physics is following up on Kim's experiment to test the Cornell findings.

"All solid samples studied to date were made by the so-called blocked capillary method which tends to make poor quality crystals," says Kim. Clark made a new torsional oscillator that allows the growth of solid helium of extremely high crystallinity. The new solid helium is grown from the superfluid phase by keeping the sample cell at the temperature and pressure boundary where both solid and liquid helium coexist. As more helium is very slowly fed into the chamber, a helium crystal grows from the superfluid.

"This constant pressure growth is indeed the preferred method of many prior experiments in growing single crystals," says Chan.

These high quality crystals do exhibit supersolid response, but the supersolid percentage is smaller at only about .3 percent rather than 1 percent.

In another experiment, Chan's team tested the expected result of increased pressure on the solid helium to determine the pressure at which supersolid behavior disappears. Kim and Chan extended the experiment up to 130 atmospheres and found the supersolid portion decreases with pressure from 60 atmospheres and higher. The researchers extrapolated the decreasing fraction and determined that at or near 170 atmospheres the supersolid portion will disappear. "However, they have not carried the experiment to check this extrapolation because the sample cell exploded," says Chan.

Source: Penn State


print this article email this article download pdf blog this article bookmark this article     Stumble it Digg this share on Facebook retweet share on Reddit add to delicious
Rate this story - 4.3 /5 (29 votes)

Rank Filter

Move the slider to adjust rank threshold, so that you can hide some of the comments.


Display comments: newest first

  • Ragtime - May 10, 2008
    • Rank: not rated yet
    The supersolidity is probably related to trivial regelation phenomena. As we know, solid ice is covered by thin layer of melted water, which doesn't freeze even at -43 deg C. This layer is responsible for low friction coeficient of ice. And at the case of frozen helium such layer is superfluos. We should realize, the layer of fluid is behaving like liquid phase in substantially higher temperature, so that superfluous transition occurs in lower temperature, then in the bulk phase. At even deeper temperature or pressure whole the helium will freeze, so that the supersolidity effect disapears completely. Therefore this simple mechanism explains the behavior of superosolidity transition completelly.

February 18, 2007 all stories

Comments: 1

4.3 /5 (29 votes)
  • Stumble this up

  • Digg this

  • share this

  • hide
  • Related Stories

  • Frozen helium-4 may be an unusual 'superglass'
    created May 01, 2009 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0
  • Simply Weird Stuff: Making Supersolids with Ultracold Gas Atoms
    created Jan 13, 2009 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0
  • Can quantum antiferromagnets reveal secrets of bosonic supersolids?
    created Mar 13, 2008 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0
  • Quantum Criticality Found in a Simple Liquid
    created Sep 07, 2007 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0
  • Probing Question: Are there upper and lower limits to temperature?
    created Jun 07, 2007 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0



  • hide
  • Relevant PhysicsForums posts

  • Neutron energy
    created 2 hours ago
  • How to find G's
    created 3 hours ago
  • Help with projectile motion.
    created 3 hours ago
  • thoughts on gravity and space time
    created 8 hours ago
  • EMP effects?
    created 11 hours ago
  • Mr vvaiser
    created 12 hours ago
  • More from Physics Forums - General Physics

Other News

A line on string theory

A line on string theory

Physics / General Physics

created 10 hours ago | popularity 4.9 / 5 (11) | comments 7

(PhysOrg.com) -- A Harvard theoretical physicist has discussed with scientists at the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland the possibility that they may discover a theorized "stau" particle, with a lifetime ...


Do we need dark matter?

Do we need dark matter?

Physics / General Physics

created 19 hours ago | popularity 3.8 / 5 (6) | comments 19

It's the biggest problem in physics: the matter we can see in the universe accounts for just five per cent of the observed gravity that holds galaxies together.


Pushing light beyond its known limits

Pushing light beyond its known limits

Physics / Optics & Photonics

created 14 hours ago | popularity 3.8 / 5 (9) | comments 4

Scientists at the University of Adelaide have made a breakthrough that could change the world's thinking on what light is capable of.


The LHC tunnel

Peckish bird briefly downs big atom smasher

Physics / General Physics

created Nov 09, 2009 | popularity 4.1 / 5 (12) | comments 18

A peckish bird briefly knocked out part of the world's biggest atom smasher by causing a chain reaction with a piece of bread, the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN) said Monday.


First Bose-Einstein condensation of strontium

First Bose-Einstein condensation of strontium

Physics / Quantum Physics

created Nov 09, 2009 | popularity 5 / 5 (7) | comments 5

In an international first, scientists from the Institute of Quantum Optics and Quantum Information (IQOQI, Austria) produced a Bose-Einstein condensate of the alkaline-earth element strontium, thus narrowly ...