Signatures of gapless fermionic spinons on a strip of the kagome Heisenberg antiferromagnet

Amir M-Aghaei, Bela Bauer, Kirill Shtengel, and Ryan V. Mishmash
Phys. Rev. B 98, 054430 – Published 27 August 2018

Abstract

The search for exotic quantum spin liquid states in simple yet realistic spin models remains a central challenge in the field of frustrated quantum magnetism. Here we consider the canonical nearest-neighbor kagome Heisenberg antiferromagnet restricted to a quasi-one-dimensional strip consisting entirely of corner-sharing triangles. Using large-scale density matrix renormalization group calculations, we identify in this model an extended gapless quantum phase characterized by central charge c=2 and power-law decaying spin and bond-energy correlations which oscillate at tunably incommensurate wave vectors. We argue that this intriguing spin liquid phase can be understood as a marginal instability of a two-band spinon Fermi surface coupled to an emergent U(1) gauge field, an interpretation which we substantiate via bosonization analysis and Monte Carlo calculations on model Gutzwiller variational wave functions. Our results represent one of the first numerical demonstrations of emergent fermionic spinons in a simple SU(2) invariant nearest-neighbor Heisenberg model beyond the strictly one-dimensional (Bethe chain) limit.

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  • Received 12 September 2017
  • Revised 31 July 2018

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.98.054430

©2018 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Amir M-Aghaei1, Bela Bauer2, Kirill Shtengel1, and Ryan V. Mishmash3,4,5

  • 1Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California at Riverside, Riverside, California 92521, USA
  • 2Station Q, Microsoft Research, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA
  • 3Department of Physics and Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, USA
  • 4Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, USA
  • 5Department of Physics, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08540, USA

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Issue

Vol. 98, Iss. 5 — 1 August 2018

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