Encoding Complexity within Supramolecular Analogues of Frustrated Magnets
Andrew B. Cairns, Matthew J. Cliffe, Joseph A. M. Paddison, Dominik, Daisenberger, Matthew G. Tucker, Fran\c{c}ois-Xavier Coudert, Andrew L., Goodwin

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how inorganic cyanide polymers can mimic complex magnetic behaviors of frustrated spin systems, revealing new emergent phenomena and offering insights into controlling such states in chemical materials.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to emulate frustrated magnetic interactions using inorganic supramolecular assemblies, bridging chemistry and physics for emergent state control.
Findings
Gold(I)/silver(I) cyanides can mimic XY spin interactions.
Complex magnetic states like quadrupolar order are realized structurally.
Structural chemistry can serve as a platform for studying frustrated magnetism.
Abstract
At the heart of systems chemistry lies the idea that supramolecular interactions can give rise to complex and unexpected collective states that emerge on a fundamentally different lengthscale to that of the interactions themselves. While in certain cases - e.g. the self-assembly of virus-like polyhedral cages from coordination building blocks - it is possible to control emergence in a systematic manner, the development of general approaches remains a fundamental challenge in the field. In the conceptually-related domain of frustrated magnetism - where collective states give rise to exotic physics of relevance to data storage and spintronics - the task of predicting emergent behaviour is simplified through control over the geometry and form of the magnetic interactions from which complexity arises. Seeking to combine approaches from these two fields, we study here the solid phases of…
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