South Korean scientists claim to have made a superconductor, LK-99, that works at room temperature.
But electricity that travels along a superconductor barely loses energy along the way.
That's the premise behind LK-99, a possible superconductor material that scientists in South Korea say they have devised, which has been dominating headlines and social media posts in the past week or so.
To that end, some experts are trying, but this holy grail has eluded scientists for many years, so the prospects are still a long way off, experts told Insider.
"So low power energy chips is one major area in chip design."
Persons:
Leonard Kahn, Kahn, Edwin Fohtung, Elif Akçalı, Akçalı, it's, Meissner, we're, Siddharth Joshi, Joshi, Navid Asadi, Asadi, Dale Rogers
Organizations:
Service, Department of Physics, University of Rhode Island's College, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, University of Florida, University of Notre Dame, Arizona State University
Locations:
Wall, Silicon, South Korea