Adra Carr,John Bowlan,C. Mazzoli,Colby Walker,Xiaxin Ding,Andi Barbour,Wen Hu,S. B. Wilkins,Jong Hyuk Kim,Nara Lee,Young Jai Choi,Shi-Zeng Lin,Richard L. Sandberg,Vivien S. Zapf
Magnetic frustration can produce exotic spin configurations and dynamics. Here, the authors explore the seemingly simple competition between ferromagnetic nearest- and antiferromagnetic next-nearest neighbor interactions along Ising spin chains, as realized in the magnetoelectric compound Lu${}_{2}$CoMnO${}_{6}$. Commonly, this situation is described by the axial next-nearest-neighbor Ising model. For the first time, the authors measure and calculate its correlated magnetic dynamics, resulting from a characteristic fractal set of first-order phase boundaries. Experiments and Monte Carlo simulations reveal a dynamics slowdown while approaching the phase transition regime.