ANNNI model
In statistical physics, the axial next-nearest neighbor Ising model, usually known as the ANNNI model, is a variant of the Ising model in which competing ferromagnetic and
antiferromagnetic exchange interactions couple spins at nearest and next-nearest neighbor sites along one of the crystallographic axes of the lattice. The model is a prototype for complicated spatially modulated magnetic superstructures in
crystals.
The model was introduced in 1961 by Roger Elliott from the University of Oxford, but only given this name in 1980 by Michael E. Fisher and Walter Selke. It provides a theoretical basis for understanding numerous experimental observations on commensurate and incommensurate structures, as well as accompanying phase transitions, in magnets, alloys, adsorbates, polytypes, multiferroics, and other solids. Further applications range from modeling of cortex to
quantum information.