In
condensed matter physics
Condensed matter physics is the field of physics that deals with the macroscopic and microscopic physical properties of matter, especially the solid and liquid phases which arise from electromagnetic forces between atoms. More generally, the sub ...
, a spin glass is a magnetic state characterized by randomness, besides cooperative behavior in freezing of spins at a temperature called 'freezing temperature' ''Tf''.
In
ferromagnetic
Ferromagnetism is a property of certain materials (such as iron) which results in a large observed magnetic permeability, and in many cases a large magnetic coercivity allowing the material to form a permanent magnet. Ferromagnetic materials ...
solids, component atoms' magnetic
spins all align in the same direction. Spin glass when contrasted with a ferromagnet is defined as "
disordered" magnetic state in which spins are aligned randomly or without a regular pattern and the couplings too are random.
The term "glass" comes from an analogy between the ''magnetic'' disorder in a spin glass and the ''positional'' disorder of a conventional, chemical
glass, e.g., a window glass. In window glass or any
amorphous solid the atomic bond structure is highly irregular; in contrast, a
crystal has a uniform pattern of atomic bonds. In
ferromagnetic
Ferromagnetism is a property of certain materials (such as iron) which results in a large observed magnetic permeability, and in many cases a large magnetic coercivity allowing the material to form a permanent magnet. Ferromagnetic materials ...
solids, magnetic spins all align in the same direction; this is analogous to a crystal's
lattice-based structure.
The individual atomic bonds in a spin glass are a mixture of roughly equal numbers of ferromagnetic bonds (where neighbors have the same orientation) and
antiferromagnetic bonds (where neighbors have exactly the opposite orientation: north and south poles are flipped 180 degrees). These patterns of aligned and misaligned atomic magnets create what are known as
frustrated interactions – distortions in the geometry of atomic bonds compared to what would be seen in a regular, fully aligned solid. They may also create situations where more than one geometric arrangement of atoms is stable.
Spin glasses and the complex internal structures that arise within them are termed "
metastable" because they are "stuck" in stable configurations other than the
lowest-energy configuration (which would be aligned and ferromagnetic). The mathematical complexity of these structures is difficult but fruitful to study experimentally or in
simulations; with applications to physics, chemistry, materials science and
artificial neural networks in computer science.
Magnetic behavior
It is the time dependence which distinguishes spin glasses from other magnetic systems.
Above the spin glass
transition temperature, ''T''
''c'',
[ is identical with the so-called "freezing temperature" ] the spin glass exhibits typical magnetic behaviour (such as
paramagnetism).
If a
magnetic field
A magnetic field is a vector field that describes the magnetic influence on moving electric charges, electric currents, and magnetic materials. A moving charge in a magnetic field experiences a force perpendicular to its own velocity and to ...
is applied as the sample is cooled to the transition temperature, magnetization of the sample increases as described by the
Curie law
For many paramagnetic materials, the magnetization of the material is directly proportional to an applied magnetic field, for sufficiently high temperatures and small fields. However, if the material is heated, this proportionality is reduced. F ...
. Upon reaching ''T''
''c'', the sample becomes a spin glass and further cooling results in little change in magnetization. This is referred to as the ''field-cooled'' magnetization.
When the external magnetic field is removed, the magnetization of the spin glass falls rapidly to a lower value known as the ''remanent'' magnetization.
Magnetization then decays slowly as it approaches zero (or some small fraction of the original value—this
remains unknown). This
decay is non-exponential and no simple function can fit the curve of magnetization versus time adequately.
This slow decay is particular to spin glasses. Experimental measurements on the order of days have shown continual changes above the noise level of instrumentation.
Spin glasses differ from ferromagnetic materials by the fact that after the external magnetic field is removed from a ferromagnetic substance, the magnetization remains indefinitely at the remanent value. Paramagnetic materials differ from spin glasses by the fact that, after the external magnetic field is removed, the magnetization rapidly falls to zero, with no remanent magnetization. The decay is rapid and exponential.
If the sample is cooled below ''T''
''c'' in the absence of an external magnetic field and a magnetic field is applied after the transition to the spin glass phase, there is a rapid initial increase to a value called the ''zero-field-cooled'' magnetization. A slow upward drift then occurs toward the field-cooled magnetization.
Surprisingly, the sum of the two complicated functions of time (the zero-field-cooled and remanent magnetizations) is a constant, namely the field-cooled value, and thus both share identical functional forms with time,
at least in the limit of very small external fields.
Edwards–Anderson model
In this model, we have spins arranged on a
-dimensional lattice with only nearest neighbor interactions similar to the
Ising model. This model can be solved exactly for the critical temperatures and a glassy phase is observed to exist at low temperatures.
The
Hamiltonian for this spin system is given by:
:
where
refers to the
Pauli spin matrix for the spin-half particle at lattice point
, and the sum over
refers to summing over neighboring lattice points
and
. A negative value of
denotes an antiferromagnetic type interaction between spins at points
and
. The sum runs over all nearest neighbor positions on a lattice, of any dimension. The variables
representing the magnetic nature of the spin-spin interactions are called bond or link variables.
In order to determine the
partition function for this system, one needs to average the
free energy