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      Room temperature spin-ice physics in cadmium cyanide

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          Abstract

          Spin-ices are frustrated magnets that support a particularly rich variety of emergent physics. Typically, it is the interplay of magnetic dipole interactions, spin anisotropy, and geometric frustration on the pyrochlore lattice that drives spin-ice formation. The relevant physics occurs at temperatures commensurate with the magnetic interaction strength, which for most systems is 1--5\,K. This low energy scale poses severe challenges for experimental studies of spin-ices and the practical exploitation of their unusual properties. Here, we show that non-magnetic cadmium cyanide (Cd(CN)\(_2\)) exhibits analogous behaviour to magnetic spin-ices, but does so on a temperature scale that is nearly two orders of magnitude greater. The electric dipole moments of cyanide ions in Cd(CN)\(_2\) assume the role of magnetic pseudospins, with the difference in energy scale reflecting the increased strength of electric \emph{vs} magnetic dipolar interactions. As a result, spin-ice physics influences the structural behaviour of Cd(CN)\(_2\) even at room temperature.

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          Zero-point entropy in ‘spin ice’

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            Ordering and Antiferromagnetism in Ferrites

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              Spin Ice State in Frustrated Magnetic Pyrochlore Materials

              A frustrated system is one whose symmetry precludes the possibility that every pairwise interaction ("bond") in the system can be satisfied at the same time. Such systems are common in all areas of physical and biological science. In the most extreme cases, they can have a disordered ground state with "macroscopic" degeneracy; that is, one that comprises a huge number of equivalent states of the same energy. Pauling's description of the low-temperature proton disorder in water ice was perhaps the first recognition of this phenomenon and remains the paradigm. In recent years, a new class of magnetic substance has been characterized, in which the disorder of the magnetic moments at low temperatures is precisely analogous to the proton disorder in water ice. These substances, known as spin ice materials, are perhaps the "cleanest" examples of such highly frustrated systems yet discovered. They offer an unparalleled opportunity for the study of frustration in magnetic systems at both an experimental and a theoretical level. This article describes the essential physics of spin ice, as it is currently understood, and identifies new avenues for future research on related materials and models.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                11 April 2019
                Article
                1904.05749
                af626306-0981-4acd-814a-bd3e0da29d6b

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                Custom metadata
                25 pages, 4 figures
                cond-mat.mtrl-sci cond-mat.dis-nn cond-mat.str-el

                Condensed matter,Theoretical physics
                Condensed matter, Theoretical physics

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