Submitted by Infferno122 t3_11o5rkm in askscience
I'm currently in the second year of my Physics degree and had a question about superconductors, which we have not covered in much detail. So a superconductor at a sufficiently low temperature should exhibit 0 resistance but would introducing impurities in the superconductor change this? I imagine it would reduce the critical temperature, but could impurities get rid of the superconducting property of this material completely?
Thanks in advance!
SwitchingtoUbuntu t1_jbrq3ya wrote
It totally depends on the superconducting metal and the impurity.
Superconductors have a tendency of "proximatizing" other materials, making them superconducting by being near to them.
For example, a 1nm thin film of a normal metal on top of a 100nm thick film of superconducting Niobium will likely superconduct.
Similarly, some superconducting metals when deposited with non-metals actually can become better superconductors. For example, Aluminum that has a little oxygen in it (granular aluminum, or dirty aluminum) actually has a higher superconducting critical temperature than clean aluminum.
That said, if you get too much copper or gold in your superconducting film, it just won't superconduct at all.
The interactions are all really complex and involve the coupling between the lattice of the superconducting metal and the charge carriers.
Look up "BCS theory" for more info!
Source: PhD working in superconducting qubits.