Researchers observe nematic order in magnetic helices, echoing liquid crystal behavior

Gaby Clark
scientific editor

Andrew Zinin
lead editor

Nematic materials are made of elongated molecules that align in a preferred direction, but, like in a fluid, are spaced out irregularly. The best-known nematic materials are liquid crystals, which are used in liquid crystal display (LCD) screens. However, nematic order has been identified in a wide range of systems, including bacterial suspensions and superconductors.
Now, a team led by researchers at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and University of California, Santa Cruz, has discovered a nematic order in a magnetic material, in which the magnetic spins of the material are arranged into coils pointing in the same general direction.
"If we think of these magnetic helices as the objects that are aligning, the magnetism follows expectations for nematic phases," said Zoey Tumbleson, a graduate student at Berkeley Lab and the University of California, Santa Cruz, who led this work. "These phases were not previously known and it's very exciting to see this generalized to a wider field of study."
While this new exotic order needs further study, the discovery could one day lead to future technology based on tiny magnetic helices rather than conventional liquid crystals.
"If you can control these weird helical nematic states, maybe you could build new materials with on-demand properties," said co-author Joshua Turner, a lead scientist at SLAC and principal investigator at the Stanford Institute for Materials and Energy Sciences (SIMES). "I feel like this is just the beginning."
The researchers in Science Advances.

Two X-ray facilities probe two very different timescales of motion
The team found the magnetic nematic order in special films of iron germanide that were grown by the collaboration at the University of California, Berkeley, and Berkeley Lab. These films lacked the crystalline order typically seen in this material.
"Our discovery of a magnetic nematic phase is an example of a new exotic phase in amorphous iron germanide," said co-author Sujoy Roy, a staff scientist at Berkeley Lab. "This work is part of our group's broader research effort into understanding fluctuations in magnetic materials, which could lead to advancements in information storage and other microelectronic applications."
To determine the arrangement and motions of the magnetic coils in the films, the researchers brought them to two different X-ray light sources—the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) at SLAC and the Advanced Light Source (ALS) at Berkeley Lab—where they shot X-rays through the films and measured how they scattered.
Using both light sources' unique capabilities, they discovered motions of the magnetic coils at two vastly different timescales, one being a trillion times faster than the other. At LCLS, they measured rapid motions occurring within billionths of a second, or nanoseconds. At ALS, they observed slower motions happening over hundreds of seconds.
"This work truly would not have come together without the collaboration between SLAC and Berkeley Lab," Tumbleson said.
Together, the findings from both light sources give researchers a first glimpse of the complicated motions involved in this magnetic nematic order. Future measurements could investigate either the motion on timescales between the two investigated in this work, or at even faster timescales with the recent upgrade at LCLS.
"These measurements at very different timescales combine to provide us with this really interesting picture. It's mysterious and points to much more occurring here than previously understood," Turner said. "But we're only capturing a narrow sliver of what's happening."
More information: Zoey Tumbleson et al, Thermodynamic phase transitions of nematic order in magnetic helices, Science Advances (2025).
Journal information: Science Advances
Provided by SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory