Finding order in disorder demonstrates a new state of matter

Authored by lanl.gov and submitted by SirT6
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I find it most intriguing because usually theoretical frameworks move from classical physics to quantum physics. Not so with topological order. - Cristiano Nisoli

‘Spin doctors’ note that topological order, associated with quantum mechanics, also applies to classical material called artificial spin ice

LOS ALAMOS, N.M., April 2, 2018—Physicists have identified a new state of matter whose structural order operates by rules more aligned with quantum mechanics than standard thermodynamic theory. In a classical material called artificial spin ice, which in certain phases appears disordered, the material is actually ordered, but in a “topological” form.

“Our research shows for the first time that classical systems such as artificial spin ice can be designed to demonstrate topological ordered phases, which previously have been found only in quantum conditions,” said Los Alamos National Laboratory physicist Cristiano Nisoli, leader of the theoretical group that collaborated with an experimental group at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, led by Peter Schiffer (now at Yale University).

Physicists generally classify the phases of matter as ordered, such as crystal, and disordered, such as gases, and they do so on the basis of the symmetry of such order, Nisoli said.

“The demonstration that these topological effects can be designed into an artificial spin ice system opens the door to a wide range of possible new studies,” Schiffer said.

Specialized material maintained puzzling energy levels in experiments

In the new research, the team explored a particular artificial spin ice geometry, called Shakti spin ice. While these materials are theoretically designed, this time, the discovery of its exotic, out-of-equilibrium properties proceeded from experiments to theory.

Performing photoemission electron microscopy characterization at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Light Source at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Schiffer’s team revealed something puzzling: Unlike other artificial spin ices, which could reach their low-energy state as temperature was reduced in successive quenches, Shakti spin ice stubbornly remained at about the same energy level. “The system gets stuck in a way that it cannot rearrange itself, even though a large-scale rearrangement would allow it to fall to a lower energy state,” Schiffer said.

Clearly, something was being conserved, but nothing appeared as an obvious candidate in a material artificially devised to provide a disordered spin picture.

Backing off to see the big picture

Moving away from a spin picture and concentrating on an emergent description of the excitations of the system, Nisoli described a low-energy state that could be mapped exactly into a celebrated theoretical model, the “dimer cover model,” whose topological properties had been recognized before. Then, data from the experiment confirmed topological charge conservation and thus a long lifetime for the excitations.

“I find it most intriguing because usually theoretical frameworks move from classical physics to quantum physics. Not so with topological order,” Nisoli said.

Physical experiments were performed by Schiffer’s team at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and were funded by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science. The kinetics of the material were investigated in real time and real space at the Advanced Light Source.

The theoretical work of Nisoli was funded by a Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) grant from Los Alamos National Laboratory, and the work of Caravelli by LDRD though the Oppenheimer Distinguished Fellowship at Los Alamos.

Publication: Classical Topological Order in the Kinetics of Artificial Spin Ice, Nature Physics, DOI: 10.1038/s41567-018-0077-0

Oznog99 on April 4th, 2018 at 04:45 UTC »

Start the timer! How long until "artificial spin ice" is referenced in scifi?

Joe_Physics on April 4th, 2018 at 03:37 UTC »

Calling this a "new state of matter" goes a little bit overboard, but still an interesting result.

Artificial spin ice

These are arrays of small magnets (nanomagnets) which are arranged in a way which prevents all of the magnets from being able to align with each other. Magnets have a preference to align (magnets prefer having their north end near the south end of another magnet), but you can put a bunch of magnets together in such a way that they can't all be aligned, which has interesting properties. Researchers in this field usually look at either "spin ices" or "artificial spin ices". A "spin ice" is an arrangement which forms more or less naturally (usually with a little coaxing), and in which the "magnets" are atomic spins. The "artificial" part means they actually have very small magnets (i.e., bigger than single atoms) which were placed together by the researchers. In particular, the researchers used lithography to etch away portions of a material so that what remained was the artificial spin ice they were looking to study.

On it's own, this is not something new.

The big thing here is the presence of "topological" order. This is the hotness right now in condensed matter physics - and indeed the study of topology has started to permeate into other areas as well. The notion of "topology" is that some properties must exist given the general makeup of the thing you're studying. The oft quoted example is the torus, which is "characterized" by having a "hole". No matter what you do to your torus, as long as it doesn't "break" the torus, you have to have the hole. So, a coffee cup and a doughnut are topologically equivalent.

In physics, what we care about is the description of the energy of a system - the Hamiltonian. We can study the mathematical structure of the Hamiltonian and look for various sorts of "holes" or "topological charges".

If the Hamiltonian has these topological charges, it often means that you get emergent particles that you can't get rid of - which can be incredibly useful if you don't want to get rid of these emergent particles.

One thing that I'd like to mention; one of the researchers makes the claim

Our research shows for the first time that classical systems such as artificial spin ice can be designed to demonstrate topological ordered phases, which previously have been found only in quantum conditions

which is maybe false? Maybe he was misquoted, or perhaps unaware, or maybe he's trying to focus on the "can be designed" aspect, but topological ordering has been observed in classical systems, such as equatorial waves on Earth's surface.

SirT6 on April 4th, 2018 at 01:24 UTC »

Published in Nature Physics. Big deal or no? Physics isn’t my thing, so I’m not sure.