It has been claimed that graphite hosts superconductivity at room temperature, although all efforts to isolate it have been vain.Here we report separation methods that use magnetic field gradients to sort the superconducting fromnormal grains out of industrial graphite powders. We have obtained a concentrate of above room temperature superconducting particles. Electrical resistance measurements on agglomerates of sorted grains of synthetic, natural and spectroscopically pure graphite all show transition temperatures up to Tc^{onset}~700 K withzero resistance up to ~500K. Magnetization measurements confirm these values through jumpsat Tc in the zero field cooled curves, and by the occurrence of diamagnetic hysteretic cyclesshrinking with temperature. Transmission electron microscope images yield a hint of the novel structure of these grains.
Next scheduled seminars are:
Thursday 13 March: Claire Marrache Kikuchi (IJCLab, Orsay) to be confirmed