Ice Rule and Emergent Frustration in Particle Ice and Beyond
Antonio Ortiz-Ambriz, Cristiano Nisoli, Charles Reichhardt, Cynthia J., O. Reichhardt, and Pietro Tierno

TL;DR
This paper reviews how geometric frustration and the ice rule manifest in soft condensed matter systems of confined particles, highlighting their potential for creating exotic phases and applications in memory and logic devices.
Contribution
It introduces a new paradigm of engineered geometric frustration in particle systems, focusing on experimental and theoretical advances beyond mathematical physics.
Findings
Engineered frustration via lattice topology and particle placement.
Emergence of exotic phases with topological defects.
Potential for technological applications in memory and logic.
Abstract
Geometric frustration and the ice rule are two concepts that are intimately connected and widespread across condensed matter. The first refers to the inability of a system to satisfy competing interactions in the presence of spatial constraints. The second, in its more general sense, represents a prescription for the minimization of the topological charges in a constrained system. Both can lead to manifolds of high susceptibility and non-trivial, constrained disorder where exotic behaviors can appear and even be designed deliberately. In this Colloquium, we describe the emergence of geometric frustration and the ice rule in soft condensed matter. This Review excludes the extensive developments of mathematical physics within the field of geometric frustration, but rather focuses on systems of confined micro- or mesoscopic particles that emerge as a novel paradigm exhibiting spin degrees…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
