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      Switchable geometric frustration in an artificial-spin-ice–superconductor heterosystem

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          Composite Flux-Line Lattices Stabilized in Superconducting Films by a Regular Array of Artificial Defects

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            Real-space observation of emergent magnetic monopoles and associated Dirac strings in artificial kagome spin ice

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              Artificial ‘spin ice’ in a geometrically frustrated lattice of nanoscale ferromagnetic islands

              Frustration, defined as a competition between interactions such that not all of them can be satisfied, is important in systems ranging from neural networks to structural glasses. Geometrical frustration, which arises from the topology of a well-ordered structure rather than from disorder, has recently become a topic of considerable interest. In particular, geometrical frustration among spins in magnetic materials can lead to exotic low-temperature states, including 'spin ice', in which the local moments mimic the frustration of hydrogen ion positions in frozen water. Here we report an artificial geometrically frustrated magnet based on an array of lithographically fabricated single-domain ferromagnetic islands. The islands are arranged such that the dipole interactions create a two-dimensional analogue to spin ice. Images of the magnetic moments of individual elements in this correlated system allow us to study the local accommodation of frustration. We see both ice-like short-range correlations and an absence of long-range correlations, behaviour which is strikingly similar to the low-temperature state of spin ice. These results demonstrate that artificial frustrated magnets can provide an uncharted arena in which the physics of frustration can be directly visualized.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nature Nanotechnology
                Nature Nanotech
                Springer Nature
                1748-3387
                1748-3395
                July 2018
                June 11 2018
                July 2018
                : 13
                : 7
                : 560-565
                Article
                10.1038/s41565-018-0162-7
                29892018
                77b0ba77-c8cf-4528-8a93-86d4dc63275d
                © 2018

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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