Two-dimensional electron systems, as exploited for device applications, can lose their conducting properties because of local Coulomb repulsion, leading to a Mott-insulating state. In triangular geometries, any concomitant antiferromagnetic spin ordering can be prevented by geometric frustration, spurring speculations about 'melted' phases, known as spin liquid. Here we show that for a realization of a triangular electron system by epitaxial atom adsorption on a semiconductor, such spin disorder, however, does not appear. Our study compares the electron excitation spectra obtained from theoretical simulations of the correlated electron lattice with data from high-resolution photoemission. We find that an unusual row-wise antiferromagnetic spin alignment occurs that is reflected in the photoemission spectra as characteristic 'shadow bands' induced by the spin pattern. The magnetic order in a frustrated lattice of otherwise non-magnetic components emerges from longer-range electron hopping between the atoms. This finding can offer new ways of controlling magnetism on surfaces. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Li, G., Höpfner, P., Schäfer, J., Blumenstein, C., Meyer, S., Bostwick, A., … Hanke, W. (2013). Magnetic order in a frustrated two-dimensional atom lattice at a semiconductor surface. Nature Communications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms2617
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