Learn languages naturally with fresh, real content!

tap to translate recording

Explore By Region

flag Scientists created a stable, superconducting germanium at 3.5 K using precise gallium doping, enabling future quantum and low-power electronics.

flag Scientists have created a new superconducting form of germanium that conducts electricity with zero resistance at 3.5 Kelvin, using precise gallium doping via molecular beam epitaxy. flag The method maintains crystal stability, enabling electron pairing needed for superconductivity while preserving compatibility with existing semiconductor manufacturing. flag Published in Nature Nanotechnology, the breakthrough could lead to scalable quantum devices like Josephson junctions and low-power cryogenic electronics, advancing quantum computing and energy-efficient technologies.

4 Articles