A superconductor is a substance that exhibits 'superconductivity', having no electricity electrical resistance, at sufficiently low temperatures.
These materials exhibit superconductivity in proximity to a magnetic quantum critical point.
These salts all exhibit superconductivity at low temperatures.
A Bechgaard salt is any one of a number of organic charge-transfer complexes that exhibit superconductivity at low temperatures.
ZrZn is one of only two substances to exhibit superconductivity and ferromagnetism simultaneously, with the other being UGe.
It exhibits superconductivity at relatively high temperature of 8.4 K and, similar to LaB, is an electron cathode.
In physical chemistry and condensed matter physics, an organic superconductor is an organic compound which exhibits superconductivity at low temperatures.
It is unknown whether any material exhibiting room-temperature superconductivity exists.
Recently researchers in the US discovered a new family of compounds that exhibit superconductivity.
The ζ-phase with metallic cluster has been known to exhibit superconductivity at low temperature.