Evidence of near-ambient superconductivity in a N-doped lutetium hydride

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GoodTaste

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Article
Published: 08 March 2023
Evidence of near-ambient superconductivity in a N-doped lutetium hydride

Source: Nature

Should "in a N-doped..." be "in an N-doped..."?

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If you pronounce the 'N' as 'nitrogen' (I assume that's what it means) rather than as the letter, then the original is fine.
 
In writting either a or an is acceptable in my opinion. The purpose of "an" is euphony in speech when the following word begins with a vowel sound. If I had to read such a title aloud I'd solve the problem by making the "a" rhyme with pay.
 
Give me an/a "N".

In the above, I would write "an"
 
It should be "an." You can N-dope and P-dope. Negative and positive. Add electrons or add holes.
 
It should be "an." You can N-dope and P-dope. Negative and positive. Add electrons or add holes.

Are you sure? I think 'N-doping' stands for 'nitrogen doping', which is a kind of N-type (negative type) doping. (Please put me right if that's not the case.)

Since this is the title of the paper, I tend to think that it isn't an error, and that the writer assumes it to be read as the full word 'nitrogen' rather than the letter 'N'.
 
You seem to be right. I was going on general knowledge and not this specific experiment. It is nitrogen.
 
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