Quinn and Ittner's (1963) superconductivity experiment

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on estimating the maximum possible resistivity in Quinn and Ittner's superconductivity experiment. The main confusion arises from understanding the definitions of "l" (length) and "A" (cross-sectional area) in the resistivity formula, particularly in relation to the dimensions of a squashed lead pipe and the silicon oxide layer. Visualizing the current path as a circular route that becomes nearly square when compressed helps clarify the problem. The diagram's lack of scale contributes to misunderstandings, but a clearer perspective on the dimensions aids in resolving these issues. The experiment is confirmed to date back to 1962, not 1963, which is noted for accuracy.
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Homework Statement



The problem is Exercise 1 here: http://www.open.edu/openlearn/science-maths-technology/engineering-and-technology/engineering/superconductivity/content-section-2.1.

I am interested in question (c), where you are asked to estimate the maximum possible resistivity.

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The Attempt at a Solution



I am afraid I don't get their explanation about what counts as "l" and "A" in the formula for resistivity ("For the tube, the length of the current path [...] is essentially twice the width of the silicon oxide layer, and the cross-sectional area perpendicular to current flow [...] is the length of the tube times the thickness of the lead films."). I think the problem I have is that I can't quite visualise the whole situation. I was unable to find a copy of the original paper on the internet so I would be very grateful if someone could shed some light on this for me. Thank you.
 
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Imagine you took a 17mm length of old-fashioned water pipe. It would be made of lead. That's why plumbers are so-named, because they worked with Pb, from the Latin, plumbum.

A straight length of round pipe can provide us with a circular path for current flow. Look at the pipe from the end, there you see the circle for the circular path.

To make the pipe fit into some narrow gap we have for it, you squash it almost flat, but not totally flat. We don't want the top of the circle to be squahed so hard that it contacts the bottom. We want to still keep that circular path, though by now it is resemblng a square path. To stop the top from making electrical contact with the bottom, you could insert a SiO2 spacer into the tube before we squash it.

The "ring" in the diagram is not drawn to scale; thngs might be clearer if it were. But on looking at the dimensions on the figure, you can estimate the minimum path length for current flowing around that squashed pipe.

I hope that helps.
 
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Many thanks. That was very helpful. I can see now that I was confused by the fact that the figure is not drawn to scale.

(Just for the sake of completeness: I made a mistake with the date of the experiment, which dates back to 1962, not 1963!)
 
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