Let $C$ be a category enriched over finite-dimensional $k$-vector spaces. A Serre functor for $C$ is a $k$-linear automorphism $S : C \to C$ such that there is a natural equivalence
$$\text{Hom}(x, y) \cong \text{Hom}(y, Sx)^{\ast}.$$
Serre functors are unique when they exist. The example that motivates the name occurs when $C = D_b(X)$ is the bounded derived category of coherent sheaves on a smooth projective variety $X$ over $k$ of dimension $n$; in this case, the claim that $S(-) = (-) \otimes \omega_X[n]$ is a Serre functor on $C$ is Serre duality.
Let $C, D$ be categories which admit Serre functors $S_C, S_D$, and let $F : C \to D, G : D \to C$ be an adjunction between them, with $F$ the left adjoint and $G$ the right adjoint. Then we have
$$\text{Hom}_D(x, Fy) \cong \text{Hom}_D(Fy, S_D x)^{\ast} \cong \text{Hom}_C(y, GS_D x)^{\ast} \cong \text{Hom}_C(GS_D x, S_C y) \cong \text{Hom}_C(S_C^{-1} G S_D x, y)$$
from which it follows that $S_C^{-1} G S_D$ is the left adjoint of $F$. More generally, by iterating Serre functors we get an infinite (in both directions) chain of adjoints which are generally different, although as Dylan Wilson says they just differ by a "twist" (e.g. for smooth projective varieties, they differ by tensoring by an invertible object, namely a shift of the relative canonical bundle). This implies, in particular, that we don't get any new monads or comonads by continuing the chain.
Edit: Grothendieck-Neeman duality and the Wirthmüller isomorphism by Balmer, Dell'Ambrogio, and Sanders might be of interest. I think this is the paper Dylan refers to in the comments. Quoting from the abstract:
We clarify the relationship between Grothendieck duality `a la Neeman and the Wirthm\"uller isomorphism `a la Fausk-Hu-May. We exhibit an interesting pattern of symmetry in the existence of adjoint functors between compactly generated tensor-triangulated categories, which leads to a surprising trichotomy: There exist either exactly three adjoints, exactly five, or infinitely many.