Materials that shouldn'
t exist under normal conditions but somehow do—room-temperature superconductors, stable metallic hydrogen, transparent aluminum, and other substances that would revolutionize
everything if they could actually be
made. The phrase is scientific shorthand for "things we'
ve theoretically predicted but cannot practically produce," or more cynically, "
grant proposals that will be funded for another decade." Exotic materials at ambient temperature and pressure would enable lossless power transmission, hovering vehicles, unbreakable everything, and a permanent place in the Nobel Prize committee's
heart. Their absence from your daily life is a reminder that nature doesn't give up its secrets easily, and that "theoretically possible" is not the same as "actually feasible."
Example: "The researcher announced a breakthrough in room-temperature superconductors—exotic materials at ambient temperature and pressure that would transform the
world. The stock of every energy company fluctuated wildly. Then the results couldn'
t be replicated. Then the researcher retired. Then someone else tried and failed. The exotic materials remained
exotic—beautiful in theory, absent in practice."