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Magnetic structure of the inverse opal-like structures: Small angle neutron diffraction and micromagnetic simulations. / Mistonov, A.A.; Dubitskiy, I.S.; Shishkin, I.S. ; Grigoryeva, N.A. ; Heinemann, Andre; Sapoletova, Nina A.; Valkovskiy, G.A. ; Grigoriev, S.V. .

In: Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials, Vol. 477, 01.05.2019, p. 99-108.

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Mistonov AA, Dubitskiy IS, Shishkin IS, Grigoryeva NA, Heinemann A, Sapoletova NA et al. Magnetic structure of the inverse opal-like structures: Small angle neutron diffraction and micromagnetic simulations. Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials. 2019 May 1;477:99-108. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmmm.2019.01.016

Author

Mistonov, A.A. ; Dubitskiy, I.S. ; Shishkin, I.S. ; Grigoryeva, N.A. ; Heinemann, Andre ; Sapoletova, Nina A. ; Valkovskiy, G.A. ; Grigoriev, S.V. . / Magnetic structure of the inverse opal-like structures: Small angle neutron diffraction and micromagnetic simulations. In: Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials. 2019 ; Vol. 477. pp. 99-108.

BibTeX

@article{f332108e19a6485ebe7b50537688996e,
title = "Magnetic structure of the inverse opal-like structures: Small angle neutron diffraction and micromagnetic simulations",
abstract = "Geometrical frustration arised in spin ices leads to fascinating emergent physical properties. Nowadays there is a wide diversity of the artificial structures, mimicking spin ice at the nanoscale and demonstrating some new effects. Most of the nanoscaled spin ices are two dimensional. Ferromagnetic inverse opal-like structures (IOLS) are among inspiring examples of the three-dimensional system exhibiting spin ice behaviour. However, a detailed examination of its properties is not straightforward. An experimental technique which is able to unambiguously recover magnetization distribution in 3D mesoscaled structures is lacking. In this work, we used an approach based on complementary exploiting of small-angle neutron diffraction technique and micromagnetic simulations. An external magnetic field was applied along three main directions of the IOLS mesostructure. Comparison of the calculated and measured data allowed us to determine IOLS magnetic state. The results are in good agreement with the spin ice model. Moreover influence of the demagnetizing field and vortex states on the magnetizing process were revealed. Additionally, we speculate that this approach can be also applied to other 3D magnetic mesostructures.",
author = "A.A. Mistonov and I.S. Dubitskiy and I.S. Shishkin and N.A. Grigoryeva and Andre Heinemann and Sapoletova, {Nina A.} and G.A. Valkovskiy and S.V. Grigoriev",
year = "2019",
month = may,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.jmmm.2019.01.016",
language = "English",
volume = "477",
pages = "99--108",
journal = "Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials",
issn = "0304-8853",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Magnetic structure of the inverse opal-like structures: Small angle neutron diffraction and micromagnetic simulations

AU - Mistonov, A.A.

AU - Dubitskiy, I.S.

AU - Shishkin, I.S.

AU - Grigoryeva, N.A.

AU - Heinemann, Andre

AU - Sapoletova, Nina A.

AU - Valkovskiy, G.A.

AU - Grigoriev, S.V.

PY - 2019/5/1

Y1 - 2019/5/1

N2 - Geometrical frustration arised in spin ices leads to fascinating emergent physical properties. Nowadays there is a wide diversity of the artificial structures, mimicking spin ice at the nanoscale and demonstrating some new effects. Most of the nanoscaled spin ices are two dimensional. Ferromagnetic inverse opal-like structures (IOLS) are among inspiring examples of the three-dimensional system exhibiting spin ice behaviour. However, a detailed examination of its properties is not straightforward. An experimental technique which is able to unambiguously recover magnetization distribution in 3D mesoscaled structures is lacking. In this work, we used an approach based on complementary exploiting of small-angle neutron diffraction technique and micromagnetic simulations. An external magnetic field was applied along three main directions of the IOLS mesostructure. Comparison of the calculated and measured data allowed us to determine IOLS magnetic state. The results are in good agreement with the spin ice model. Moreover influence of the demagnetizing field and vortex states on the magnetizing process were revealed. Additionally, we speculate that this approach can be also applied to other 3D magnetic mesostructures.

AB - Geometrical frustration arised in spin ices leads to fascinating emergent physical properties. Nowadays there is a wide diversity of the artificial structures, mimicking spin ice at the nanoscale and demonstrating some new effects. Most of the nanoscaled spin ices are two dimensional. Ferromagnetic inverse opal-like structures (IOLS) are among inspiring examples of the three-dimensional system exhibiting spin ice behaviour. However, a detailed examination of its properties is not straightforward. An experimental technique which is able to unambiguously recover magnetization distribution in 3D mesoscaled structures is lacking. In this work, we used an approach based on complementary exploiting of small-angle neutron diffraction technique and micromagnetic simulations. An external magnetic field was applied along three main directions of the IOLS mesostructure. Comparison of the calculated and measured data allowed us to determine IOLS magnetic state. The results are in good agreement with the spin ice model. Moreover influence of the demagnetizing field and vortex states on the magnetizing process were revealed. Additionally, we speculate that this approach can be also applied to other 3D magnetic mesostructures.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85060114214&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - http://arxiv.org/abs/1807.07953

UR - http://www.mendeley.com/research/magnetic-structure-promising-candidate-threedimensional-artificial-spin-ice-small-angle-neutron-diff

U2 - 10.1016/j.jmmm.2019.01.016

DO - 10.1016/j.jmmm.2019.01.016

M3 - Article

VL - 477

SP - 99

EP - 108

JO - Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials

JF - Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials

SN - 0304-8853

ER -

ID: 37650841