Hunting for the Dome
In the world of superconductor research, few findings generate as much excitement as the discovery of a superconducting dome. This distinctive dome-shaped region in a material's phase diagram — showing how superconductivity emerges, peaks, and fades as conditions change — is the hallmark of unconventional high-temperature superconductivity. It is the signature that told physicists they had found something truly special in cuprate materials decades ago, and now the same signature has appeared in an entirely new family of compounds: nickelates.
A team of physicists at Nanjing University has mapped a complete superconducting dome in thin films of the nickel-based compound La3Ni2O7, according to a new study published in Physical Review Letters. The finding provides the clearest evidence yet that nickelates may host the same exotic superconducting mechanisms as the copper-oxide materials that have dominated high-temperature superconductor research since the late 1980s.
Why Nickelates Matter
Nickelates — compounds built from nickel and oxygen atoms arranged in layered crystal structures — have generated intense scientific interest because of their structural similarity to cuprates, the copper-oxide materials that hold the record for highest-temperature superconductivity at ambient pressure. If nickelates can superconduct through similar mechanisms, they could reveal fundamental truths about why certain materials lose all electrical resistance at relatively high temperatures — a question that has puzzled physicists for nearly four decades.
Understanding these mechanisms is not merely an academic exercise. If researchers can identify the underlying physics that enables high-temperature superconductivity, they may be able to engineer materials that superconduct at room temperature — a breakthrough that would revolutionize power transmission, magnetic levitation, medical imaging, and quantum computing. Every new superconducting material family provides additional clues toward this goal.
Previous work had demonstrated that La3Ni2O7 can superconduct under extremely high pressure, and that carefully engineered thin films on specific substrates can exhibit superconductivity without applied pressure. However, a crucial piece of evidence was missing: no one had mapped the complete phase diagram showing how superconductivity evolves as the material's electronic properties are tuned.








