An Important Structural Requirement for the Superconductor Material: A Hypothesis
Bao Ting Zhu

TL;DR
This paper proposes a hypothesis that superconductivity requires nano-sized, continuous, straight vacuum tunnels within the material, facilitating collision-free electron conduction, supported by literature and offering new design strategies.
Contribution
It introduces a novel physical requirement for superconductors involving internal vacuum tunnels and extends this idea to neural microtubules, providing a new perspective on superconductivity mechanisms.
Findings
Supported by literature observations.
Provides strategies for designing superconducting materials.
Suggests a new mechanism for neural microtubule superconductivity.
Abstract
On a microscopic scale, resistivity during electric conduction is caused by collisions of the free conduction electrons with the obstructing atoms or molecules of the conductor material, resulting in heat production. Based on this fundamental understanding, a hypothesis concerning a physical requirement of the superconductor material is proposed, which suggests that for superconductivity (i.e., with zero resistivity) to occur, the conductor material must have nano-sized, continuous and straight vacuum tunnels inside with effective radius size large enough to allow collision-free conduction of free electrons. Besides, some of the composite atoms of the conductor should be able to readily release electrons to form the conduction band; in fact, this basic requirement is for all forms of electrical conductors, not just for superconductors. The proposed hypothesis is supported by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies
