Researchers from Skoltech of Moscow and Jilin University Of Changchun, China have experimentally shown superconductivity in cerium superhydrides CeH9 and CeH10. The road to superconductivity, an extremely attractive physical property of some materials that do not lose energy to heat because they have zero resistance, lies through tough terrain. It requires either extremely low temperatures (135 K, or minus ...
This story continues at Superconductivity found in CeH9 and CeH10
Or just read more coverage at Electronics Weekly