According to the BCS theory, when a superconductor is cooled to below the critical temperature, the very low thermal energy leads to a quantum state where an electron can lead to a distortion in the lattice of positive nuclei to give rise to a localized positive region, which attracts a second electron in to combine with the first as a “cooper pair”. The “Cooper pair” then seems to be able to interact with the lattice nuclei, resulting in no destructive interference, and it is able to move through the lattice with no loss of energy.
Based on the very low thermal energy giving rise to a quantum state where the first electron can distort the lattice, resulting in a second electron falling in to form the Cooper pair, the BCS theory is able to explain how, through the exchange of phonons and the slight lattice distortions, a superconductor below the critical temperature has zero resistance to flow of electric current
i don't get this about BCS theory
BCS theory is supposed to explain how superconductivty works - how current can flow though the lattice without resistance.
it is known that electrical resistance is caused by collisions between the electrons and the lattice. all these text books and notes go on about how electrons use charge to distort the lattice, exchange phonons of energy, creating positively charged areas that attracts other electrons to form cooper pairs, what does this prove? in the end it explains nothing about the reason why electrons do not collide with the lattice at temperatures below the critical temperature and hence it doesn't explain how superconductivity works.
ok i might have missed it, but i read notes from BOS, my textbook, sites and i still don't get this part
I'll try to expand on this point for you.
The interaction between a Cooper Pair is transient. Each electron in the pair goes on to from a Cooper pair with other electrons, and this process continues with the newly formed Cooper pair so that each electron goes on to form a Cooper pair with other electrons. The end result is that each electron in the solid is attracted to every other electron forming a large network of interactions. Causing just one of these electrons to collide and scatter from atoms in the lattice means the whole network of electrons must be made to collide, which is energeticlly too costly. The collective behaviour of all the electrons in the solid prevents any further collisions with the lattice. Nature prefers situations that spend a minimum of energy and in this case, the minimum energy situation is to have no collisions take place.
BCS theory is actually quantum mechanical. The electrons are described by a wave function that extends throughout the solid and overlaps with other electron wave functions. As a result, the whole network of electrons behaves like one wave function so that their collective moment is coherent.
Another requirement of the BCS theory is that the spins of the Cooper Pair electrons be in opposite directions.
For the High Critical Temp superconductors, their coherence length can actually be as small as one or two atomic spacings and as such it is generally accepted that the Cooper Pairs are not due to lattice deformations but associated with the antiferromagnetism of the Copper Oxide Layers!
That is why BCS theory cannot explain high temp superconductors!