1,363 research outputs found
Local magnetic structure due to inhomogeneity of interaction in S=1/2 antiferromagnetic chain
We study the magnetic properties of antiferromagnetic Heisenberg
chains with inhomogeneity of interaction. Using a quantum Monte Carlo method
and an exact diagonalization method, we study bond-impurity effect in the
uniform chain and also in the bond-alternating chain. Here `bond
impurity' means a bond with strength different from those in the bulk or a
defect in the alternating order. Local magnetic structures induced by bond
impurities are investigated both in the ground state and at finite
temperatures, calculating the local magnetization, the local susceptibility and
the local field susceptibility. We also investigate the force acting between
bond impurities and find the force generally attractive.Comment: 15pages, 34figure
Quantum crystal growing: Adiabatic preparation of a bosonic antiferromagnet in the presence of a parabolic inhomogeneity
We theoretically study the adiabatic preparation of an antiferromagnetic
phase in a mixed Mott insulator of two bosonic atom species in a
one-dimensional optical lattice. In such a system one can engineer a tunable
parabolic inhomogeneity by controlling the difference of the trapping
potentials felt by the two species. Using numerical simulations we predict that
a finite parabolic potential can assist the adiabatic preparation of the
antiferromagnet. The optimal strength of the parabolic inhomogeneity depends
sensitively on the number imbalance between the two species. We also find that
during the preparation finite size effects will play a crucial role for a
system of realistic size. The experiment that we propose can be realized, for
example, using atomic mixtures of Rubidium 87 with Potassium 41 or Ytterbium
168 with Ytterbium 174.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figure
Temperature Dependence of Spin and Bond Ordering in a Spin-Peierls System
We investigate thermodynamic properties of a one-dimensional S=1/2
antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model coupled to a lattice distortion by a quantum
Monte Carlo method. In particular we study how spin and lattice dimerize as a
function of the temperature, which gives a fundamental process of the
spin-Peierls transition in higher dimensions. The degree of freedom of the
lattice is taken into account adiabatically and the thermal distribution of the
lattice distortion is obtained by the thermal bath algorithm. We find that the
dimerization develops as the temperature decreases and it converges to the
value of the dimerization of the ground state at T=0. Furthermore we find that
the coupling constants of spins fluctuate quite largly at high temperature and
there thermodynamic properties deviate from those of the uniform chain. Doping
of non-magnetic impurities causes cut of the chain into short chains with open
boundary. We investigate thermodynamic properties of open chains taking
relaxation of the lattice into consideration. We find that strong bonds locate
at the edges and a defect of the bond alternation appears in the chain with odd
number of sites, which causes enhancement of the staggered magnetic order. We
find a spreaded staggered structure which indicates that the defect moves
diffusively in the chain even at very low temperature.Comment: 7 pages, 17 figures; added comments on section 2 and 3, corrected
typo
Nonmagnetic impurity perturbation to the quasi-two-dimensional quantum helimagnet LiCu2O2
A complete phase diagram of Zn substituted quantum quasi-two-dimensional
helimagnet LiCu2O2 has been presented. Helical ordering transition temperature
(T_h) of the original LiCu2O2 follows finite size scaling for less than ~ 5.5%
Zn substitution, which implies the existence of finite helimagnetic domains
with domain boundaries formed with nearly isolated spins. Higher Zn
substitution > 5.5% quenches the long-range helical ordering and introduces an
intriguing Zn level dependent magnetic phase transition with slight thermal
hysteresis and a universal quadratic field dependence for T_c (Zn > 0.055,H).
The magnetic coupling constants of nearest-neighbor (nn) J1 and
next-nearest-neighbor (nnn) J2 (alpha=J2/J1) are extracted from high
temperature series expansion (HTSE) fitting and N=16 finite chain exact
diagonalization simulation. We have also provided evidence of direct
correlation between long-range helical spin ordering and the magnitude of
electric polarization in this spin driven multiferroic material
Quantum Simulation of Antiferromagnetic Spin Chains in an Optical Lattice
Understanding exotic forms of magnetism in quantum mechanical systems is a
central goal of modern condensed matter physics, with implications from high
temperature superconductors to spintronic devices. Simulating magnetic
materials in the vicinity of a quantum phase transition is computationally
intractable on classical computers due to the extreme complexity arising from
quantum entanglement between the constituent magnetic spins. Here we employ a
degenerate Bose gas confined in an optical lattice to simulate a chain of
interacting quantum Ising spins as they undergo a phase transition. Strong spin
interactions are achieved through a site-occupation to pseudo-spin mapping. As
we vary an applied field, quantum fluctuations drive a phase transition from a
paramagnetic phase into an antiferromagnetic phase. In the paramagnetic phase
the interaction between the spins is overwhelmed by the applied field which
aligns the spins. In the antiferromagnetic phase the interaction dominates and
produces staggered magnetic ordering. Magnetic domain formation is observed
through both in-situ site-resolved imaging and noise correlation measurements.
By demonstrating a route to quantum magnetism in an optical lattice, this work
should facilitate further investigations of magnetic models using ultracold
atoms, improving our understanding of real magnetic materials.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Site-Dilution in quasi one-dimensional antiferromagnet Sr2(Cu1-xPdx)O3: reduction of Neel Temperature and spatial distribution of ordered moment sizes
We investigate the Neel temperature of Sr2CuO3 as a function of the site
dilution at the Cu (S=1/2) sites with Pd (S=0), utilizing the muon spin
relaxation (muSR) technique. The Neel temperature, which is Tn=5.4K for the
undoped system, becomes significantly reduced for less than one percent of
doping Pd, giving a support for the previous proposal for the good
one-dimensionality. The Pd concentration dependence of the Neel temperature is
compared with a recent theoretical study (S. Eggert, I. Affleck and M.D.P.
Horton, Phys. Rev. Lett. 89, 47202 (2002)) of weakly coupled one-dimensional
antiferromagnetic chains of S=1/2 spins, and a quantitative agreement is found.
The inhomogeneity of the ordered moment sizes is characterized by the muSR time
spectra. We propose a model that the ordered moment size recovers away from the
dopant S=0 sites with a recovery length of \xi = 150-200 sites. The origin of
the finite recovery length \xi for the gapless S=1/2 antiferromagnetic chain is
compared to the estimate based on the effective staggered magnetic field from
the neighboring chains.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, submitted to PR
Ab initio study of the influence of nanoscale doping inhomogeneities in the phase separated state of LaCaMnO
The chemical influence in the phase separation phenomenon that occurs in
perovskite manganites is discussed by means of ab initio calculations.
Supercells have been used to simulate a phase separated state, that occurs at
Ca concentrations close to the localized to itinerant crossover. We have first
considered a model with two types of magnetic ordering coexisting within the
same compound. This is not stable. However, a non-isotropic distribution of
chemical dopants is found to be the ground state. This leads to regions in the
system with different effective concentrations, that would always accompany the
magnetic phase separation at the same nanometric scale, with hole-rich regions
being more ferromagnetic in character and hole-poor regions being in the
antiferromagnetic region of the phase diagram, as long as the system is close
to a phase crossover.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
Avalanches in complex spin networks
We investigate the magnetization reversal processes on classes of complex
spin networks with antiferromagnetic interaction along the network links. With
slow field ramping the hysteresis loop and avalanches of spin flips occur due
to topological inhomogeneity of the network, even without any disorder of the
magnetic interaction [B. Tadic, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 94 (2005) 137204].
Here we study in detail properties of the magnetization avalanches, hysteresis
curves and density of domain walls and show how they can be related to the
structural inhomogeneity of the network. The probability distribution of the
avalanche size, N_s(s), displays the power-law behaviour for small s, i.e.
N_s(s)\propto s^{-\alpha}. For the scale-free networks, grown with preferential
attachment, \alpha increases with the connectivity parameter M from 1.38 for
M=1 (trees) to 1.52 for M=25. For the exponential networks, \alpha is close to
1.0 in the whole range of M.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures in 29 eps file
Developments in the negative-U modelling of the cuprate HTSC systems
The paper deals with the many stands that go into creating the unique and
complex nature of the HTSC cuprates above Tc as below. Like its predecessors it
treats charge, not spin or lattice, as prime mover, but thus taken in the
context of the chemical bonding relevant to these copper oxides. The crucial
shell filling, negative-U, double-loading fluctuations possible there require
accessing at high valent local environment as prevails within the mixed valent,
inhomogeneous two sub-system circumstance of the HTSC materials. Close
attention is paid to the recent results from Corson, Demsar, Li, Johnson,
Norman, Varma, Gyorffy and colleagues.Comment: 44 pages:200+ references. Submitted to J.Phys.:Condensed Matter, Sept
7 200
- …