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Endohedral cluster intermetallic superconductors: at the frontier between chemistry and physics

Journal

DALTON TRANSACTIONS
Volume 50, Issue 15, Pages 5109-5114

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1dt00587a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Russian Science Foundation [17-13-01033]
  2. European Regional Development Fund
  3. Mobilitas Program [MOBJD449]
  4. Russian Science Foundation [17-13-01033, 20-13-18003] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation

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Endohedral cluster intermetallic compounds, with their unique crystal and electronic structures and superconducting properties, have gained renewed interest. Recent advances show that these structures are flexible, allowing for chemical substitutions and control over superconducting-state parameters.
When a transition metal combines with an excess of a p-metal, the latter forms endohedral clusters with the number of vertices up to 14. These clusters are the building units of endohedral cluster intermetallic compounds. Although discovered a few decades ago, they have gained renewed interest due to their peculiar crystal and electronic structures and frequently observed superconducting properties. Advances over recent years reveal that endohedral cluster architectures are flexible enough, enabling chemical substitutions and the formation of a series of structurally related phases, where the same clusters can be arranged in different ways. Within the structural series, the superconducting-state parameters, including critical temperature and magnetic field, can be controlled and finely tuned. Herein, we present the most recent results in the chemical properties and superconductivity of endohedral cluster intermetallics and provide an outlook for the field.

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