superfluidity

superfluidity
superfluidity [so͞o΄pər flo͞o id′ə tē]
n.
the phenomenon, exhibited by liquid helium at temperatures below 2.18°K, of flowing without friction and having very high thermal conductivity
superfluid [so͞opərflo͞o′id]
n., adj.

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Unusual property of liquid helium cooled below -455.

75 °F (-270.97 °C). At such low temperatures, helium exhibits an enormous rise in heat conductivity and rapid flow through capillaries or over the rim of its container. To explain such behaviour, the substance is described in terms of a "two-fluid" mixture model consisting of normal helium and superfluid helium. In normal helium the atoms are in excited states (see excitation), whereas in superfluid helium they are in their ground state. As the temperature is lowered below -455.75 °F, more of the helium becomes superfluid. It is assumed that the superfluid component can move through the container without friction, thereby explaining the unusual behaviour.

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Introduction

      the frictionless flow and other exotic behaviour observed in liquid helium at temperatures near absolute zero (−273.15 °C, or −459.67 °F), and (less widely used) similar frictionless behaviour of electrons in a superconducting (superconductivity) solid. In each case the unusual behaviour arises from quantum mechanical (quantum mechanics) effects.

Discovery
      The stable isotopes of helium are helium-3 (or 3He), with two protons and one neutron, and helium-4 (or 4He), with two protons and two neutrons. 4He forms the bulk of naturally occurring helium, but the lighter isotope 3He has been formed, since about 1950, in experimentally useful quantities by the decay of tritium produced in nuclear reactors (nuclear reactor).

      Both helium isotopes remain liquid at low pressures down to absolute zero, and both display the property of superfluidity, though the onset occurs at very different temperatures in the two cases. Superfluidity (in the form of frictionless flow through narrow capillaries) was discovered in 4He below 2.17 K (− 290.98 °C, or − 455.76 °F) in 1938, simultaneously by Soviet physicist Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa (Kapitsa, Pyotr Leonidovich) and by Canadian physicists John F. Allen and A.D. Misener. (The transition to the superfluid phase is called the lambda-transition.) The light isotope 3He shows no traces of superfluidity or any other anomalous behaviour down to a temperature of 2.65 K (− 270.5 °C, or − 454.9 °F), but in 1972 American physicists Douglas D. Osheroff (Osheroff, Douglas D.), Robert C. Richardson (Richardson, Robert C.), and David M. Lee (Lee, David M.) found that below this temperature the liquid has three different anomalous phases, called A, B, and A1, each of which displays many of the same exotic phenomena as superfluid 4He, though often in somewhat less spectacular form. Thus, these phases are collectively known as superfluid 3He.

Behaviour of superfluid phases
      The most spectacular signature of the transition of liquid 4He into the superfluid phase is the sudden onset of the ability to flow without apparent friction through capillaries so small that any ordinary liquid (including 4He itself above the lambda transition) would be clamped by its viscosity; thus, a vessel that was “helium-tight” in the so-called normal phase (i.e., above the lambda temperature) might suddenly spring leaks below it. Related phenomena observed in the superfluid phase include the ability to sustain persistent currents in a ring-shaped container; the phenomenon of film creep, in which the liquid flows without apparent friction up and over the side of a bucket containing it; and a thermal conductivity that is millions of times its value in the normal phase and greater than that of the best metallic conductors. Another property is less spectacular but is extremely significant for an understanding of the superfluid phase: if the liquid is cooled through the lambda transition in a bucket that is slowly rotating, then, as the temperature decreases toward absolute zero, the liquid appears gradually to come to rest with respect to the laboratory even though the bucket continues to rotate. This nonrotation effect is completely reversible; the apparent velocity of rotation depends only on the temperature and not on the history of the system. Most of these phenomena also have been observed in the superfluid phase of liquid 3He, though in somewhat less spectacular form.

      It is thought that there is a close connection between the phenomena of superfluidity and superconductivity; indeed, from a phenomenological point of view superconductivity is simply superfluidity occurring in an electrically charged system. Thus, the frictionless flow of superfluid 4He through narrow capillaries parallels the frictionless carrying of electric current by the electrons in a superconductor, and the ability of helium to sustain circulating mass currents in a ring-shaped container is closely analogous to the persistence of electric currents in a superconducting ring. Less obviously, it turns out that the nonrotation effect is the exact analogue of the Meissner effect in superconductors (superconductivity). Many other characteristic features of superconductivity, such as the existence of vortices and the Josephson effect, have been observed in the superfluid phases of both 4He and 3He.

Theoretical explanation of superfluidity
      The accepted theoretical understanding of superfluidity (or superconductivity) is based on the idea that an extremely large number of atoms (or electrons) show identical, and moreover essentially quantum mechanical, behaviour; that is to say, the system is described by a single, coherent, quantum mechanical wave function. A single electron in an atom cannot rotate around the nucleus in any arbitrary orbit; rather, quantum mechanics requires that it rotate in such a way that its angular momentum is quantized so as to be a multiple (including zero) of h/2π, where h is Planck's constant. This is the origin of, for example, the phenomenon of atomic diamagnetism. Similarly, a single atom (or molecule) placed in a ring-shaped container is allowed by quantum mechanics to travel around the ring with only certain definite velocities, including zero. In an ordinary liquid such as water, the thermal disorder ensures that the atoms (or molecules) are distributed over the different (quantized) states available to them in such a way that the average velocity is not quantized; thus, when the container rotates and the liquid is given sufficient time to come into equilibrium, it rotates along with the container in accordance with everyday experience.

      In a superfluid system the situation is quite different. The simpler case is that of 4He, a liquid consisting of atoms that have total spin angular momentum equal to zero and whose distribution between their possible states is therefore believed to be governed by a principle known as Bose statistics (Bose-Einstein statistics). A gas of such atoms without interactions between them would undergo, at some temperature T0, a phenomenon known as Bose condensation (Bose-Einstein condensate); below T0 a finite fraction of all the atoms occupy a single state, normally that of lowest energy, and this fraction increases toward one as the temperature falls toward absolute zero. These atoms are said to be condensed. It is widely believed that a similar phenomenon should also occur for a liquid such as 4He, in which the interaction between atoms is quite important, and that the lambda transition of 4He is just the onset of Bose condensation. (The reason that this phenomenon is not seen in other systems of spin-zero atoms such as neon-22 is simply that, as the temperature is lowered, freezing occurs first.) If this is so, then, for temperatures below the lambda transition, a finite fraction of all the atoms must decide cooperatively which one of the possible quantized states they will all occupy. In particular, if the container is rotating at a sufficiently slow speed, these condensed atoms will occupy the nonrotating state—i.e., they will be at rest with respect to the laboratory—while the rest will behave normally and will distribute themselves in such a way that on average they rotate with the container. As a result, as the temperature is lowered and the fraction of condensed atoms increases, the liquid will appear gradually to come to rest with respect to the laboratory (or, more accurately, to the fixed stars). Similarly, when the liquid is flowing through a small capillary, the condensed atoms cannot be scattered by the walls one at a time since they are forced by Bose statistics to occupy the same state. They must be scattered, if at all, simultaneously. Since this process is extremely improbable, the liquid, or more precisely the condensed fraction of it, flows without any apparent friction. The other characteristic manifestations of superfluidity can be explained along similar lines.

      The idea of Bose condensation is not directly applicable to liquid 3He, because 3He atoms have spin angular momentum equal to 1/2 (in units of h/2π) and their distribution among states is therefore believed to be governed by a different principle, known as Fermi statistics (Fermi-Dirac statistics). It is believed, however, that in the superfluid phase of 3He the atoms, like the electrons in a superconductor, pair off to form Cooper pairs—a sort of quasimolecular complex—which have integral spin and therefore effectively obey Bose rather than Fermi statistics. In particular, as soon as the Cooper pairs are formed, they undergo a sort of Bose condensation, and subsequently the arguments given above for 4He apply equally to them. As in the case of the electrons in superconductors, a finite energy, the so-called energy gap Δ, is necessary to break up the pairs (or at least most of them), and as a result the thermodynamics of superfluid 3He is quite similar to that of superconductors. There is one important difference between the two cases. Whereas in a classic superconductor the electrons pair off with opposite spins and zero total angular momentum, making the internal structure of the Cooper pairs rather featureless, in 3He the atoms pair with parallel spins and nonzero total angular momentum, so that the internal structure of the pairs is much richer and more interesting. One manifestation of this is that there are three superfluid phases of liquid 3He, called A, B, and A1, which are distinguished by the different internal structures of the Cooper pairs. The B phase is in most respects similar to a classic superconductor, whereas the A (and A1) phase is strongly anisotropic in its properties and has an energy gap that actually vanishes for some directions of motion. As a result, some of the superfluid properties of the A and A1 phases are markedly different from those of 4He or 3He-B and are indeed unique among known physical systems.

Anthony James Leggett

Additional Reading
General discussions of low-temperature physics include the nontechnical summaries F.E. Simon et al., Low Temperature Physics: Four Lectures (1952, reissued 1961); K. Mendelssohn, The Quest for Absolute Zero: The Meaning of Low Temperature Physics, 2nd ed. (1977); and Tom Schachtman, Absolute Zero and the Conquest of Cold (1999). Works at a more-advanced level include the classic presentation of the theory, Fritz London, Superfluids: Macroscopic Theory of Superconductivity, 2nd rev. ed., vol. 1 (1961), and Macroscopic Theory of Superfluid Helium, vol. 2 (1964); and the later works A.J. Leggett, Quantum Liquids: Bose Condensation and Cooper Pairing in Condensed-Matter Systems (2006); David R. Tilley and John Tilley, Superfluidity and Superconductivity, 3rd ed. (1990); A.S. Alexandrov and Nevill Mott, High Temperature Superconductors and Other Superfluids (1995); and T. Tsuneto, Superconductivity and Superfluidity, trans. from Japanese by Mikio Nakahara (1998).Anthony James Leggett

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Universalium. 2010.

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