1,128 research outputs found
Spin nematics and magnetization plateau transition in anisotropic Kagome magnets
We study S=1 kagome antiferromagnets with isotropic Heisenberg exchange
and strong easy axis single-ion anisotropy . For , the low-energy
physics can be described by an effective model with
antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic .
Exploiting this connection, we argue that non-trivial ordering into a
"spin-nematic" occurs whenever dominates over , and discuss its
experimental signatures. We also study a magnetic field induced transition to a
magnetization plateau state at magnetization 1/3 which breaks lattice
translation symmetry due to ordering of the and occupies a lobe in the
- phase diagram.Comment: 4pages, two-column format, three .eps figure
Permutation-Symmetric Multicritical Points in Random Antiferromagnetic Spin Chains
The low-energy properties of a system at a critical point may have additional
symmetries not present in the microscopic Hamiltonian. This letter presents the
theory of a class of multicritical points that provide an interesting example
of this in the phase diagrams of random antiferromagnetic spin chains. One case
provides an analytic theory of the quantum critical point in the random
spin-3/2 chain, studied in recent work by Refael, Kehrein and Fisher
(cond-mat/0111295).Comment: Revtex, 4 pages (2 column format), 2 eps figure
Random Coulomb antiferromagnets: from diluted spin liquids to Euclidean random matrices
We study a disordered classical Heisenberg magnet with uniformly
antiferromagnetic interactions which are frustrated on account of their
long-range Coulomb form, {\em i.e.} in and in . This arises naturally as the limit of the
emergent interactions between vacancy-induced degrees of freedom in a class of
diluted Coulomb spin liquids (including the classical Heisenberg
antiferromagnets on checkerboard, SCGO and pyrochlore lattices) and presents a
novel variant of a disordered long-range spin Hamiltonian. Using detailed
analytical and numerical studies we establish that this model exhibits a very
broad paramagnetic regime that extends to very large values of in both
and . In , using the lattice-Green function based finite-size
regularization of the Coulomb potential (which corresponds naturally to the
underlying low-temperature limit of the emergent interactions between
orphan-spins), we only find evidence that freezing into a glassy state occurs
in the limit of strong coupling, , while no such transition seems to
exist at all in . We also demonstrate the presence and importance of
screening for such a magnet. We analyse the spectrum of the Euclidean random
matrices describing a Gaussian version of this problem, and identify a
corresponding quantum mechanical scattering problem.Comment: two-column PRB format; 17 pages; 24 .eps figure
Griffiths phase in the thermal quantum Hall effect
Two dimensional disordered superconductors with broken spin-rotation and
time-reversal invariance, e.g. with p_x+ip_y pairing, can exhibit plateaus in
the thermal Hall coefficient (the thermal quantum Hall effect). Our numerical
simulations show that the Hall insulating regions of the phase diagram can
support a sub-phase where the quasiparticle density of states is divergent at
zero energy, \rho(E)\sim |E|^{1/z-1}, with a non-universal exponent , due
to the effects of rare configurations of disorder (``Griffiths phase'').Comment: 4+ pages, 5 figure
Comment on "Spin Transport properties of the quantum one-dimensional non-linear sigma model"
In a recent preprint (cond-mat/9905415), Fujimoto has used the Bethe ansatz
to compute the finite temperature, zero frequency Drude weight of spin
transport in the quantum O(3) non-linear sigma model in a magnetic field . We show here that, contrary to his claims, the results are in accord
with earlier semiclassical results (Sachdev and Damle, cond-mat/9610115). We
also comment on his 1/N expansion, and show that it does not properly describe
the long-time correlations.Comment: 4 page
Spin-3/2 random quantum antiferromagnetic chains
We use a modified perturbative renormalization group approach to study the
random quantum antiferromagnetic spin-3/2 chain. We find that in the case of
rectangular distributions there is a quantum Griffiths phase and we obtain the
dynamical critical exponent as a function of disorder. Only in the case of
extreme disorder, characterized by a power law distribution of exchange
couplings, we find evidence that a random singlet phase could be reached. We
discuss the differences between our results and those obtained by other
approaches.Comment: 4 page
Identification of Moisture Content in Cotton Bale by Microwave Imaging
Understanding of cotton quality is important in order to properly identify the moisture content .Measurement of moisture is difficult particularly at harvest and through the gin, because of the influence these processes have different fibre quality. Dry cotton can be harvested cleanly and efficiently but may suffer undue damage in the gin. On the other hand harvesting and ginning wet cotton leads to significant issues in processing and quality. A number of methods are used to measure moisture in seed cotton, lint and fuzzy seed, each has its varying advantages. A moisture variation of the bales that is not monitored from the outside of the bale. This research examines a new microwave imaging technique to view the internal moisture variations of cotton bale. Tests on the developed imaging sensor showed the ability to resolve small structures of parameters, against a low standard background, that were less than 1 cm in width. The accuracy of the sensing structure was also shown to provide the ability to accurately determine parameter standards. A preliminary test of the imaging capabilities on a wet commercial bale showed the technique was able to accurately image and determines the location of the wet layer within the bale
Disorder, spin-orbit, and interaction effects in dilute
We derive an effective Hamiltonian for in
the dilute limit, where can be described in
terms of spin polarons hopping between the {\rm Mn} sites and coupled
to the local {\rm Mn} spins. We determine the parameters of our model from
microscopic calculations using both a variational method and an exact
diagonalization within the so-called spherical approximation. Our approach
treats the extremely large Coulomb interaction in a non-perturbative way, and
captures the effects of strong spin-orbit coupling and Mn positional disorder.
We study the effective Hamiltonian in a mean field and variational calculation,
including the effects of interactions between the holes at both zero and finite
temperature. We study the resulting magnetic properties, such as the
magnetization and spin disorder manifest in the generically non-collinear
magnetic state. We find a well formed impurity band fairly well separated from
the valence band up to for which finite size
scaling studies of the participation ratios indicate a localization transition,
even in the presence of strong on-site interactions, where is the fraction of magnetically active Mn. We study the
localization transition as a function of hole concentration, Mn positional
disorder, and interaction strength between the holes.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure
Electrostatic potential profiles of molecular conductors
The electrostatic potential across a short ballistic molecular conductor
depends sensitively on the geometry of its environment, and can affect its
conduction significantly by influencing its energy levels and wave functions.
We illustrate some of the issues involved by evaluating the potential profiles
for a conducting gold wire and an aromatic phenyl dithiol molecule in various
geometries. The potential profile is obtained by solving Poisson's equation
with boundary conditions set by the contact electrochemical potentials and
coupling the result self-consistently with a nonequilibrium Green's function
(NEGF) formulation of transport. The overall shape of the potential profile
(ramp vs. flat) depends on the feasibility of transverse screening of electric
fields. Accordingly, the screening is better for a thick wire, a multiwalled
nanotube or a close-packed self-assembled monolayer (SAM), in comparison to a
thin wire, a single-walled nanotube or an isolated molecular conductor. The
electrostatic potential further governs the alignment or misalignment of
intramolecular levels, which can strongly influence the molecular I-V
characteristic. An external gate voltage can modify the overall potential
profile, changing the current-voltage (I-V) characteristic from a resonant
conducting to a saturating one. The degree of saturation and gate modulation
depends on the metal-induced-gap states (MIGS) and on the electrostatic gate
control parameter set by the ratio of the gate oxide thickness to the channel
length.Comment: to be published in Phys. Rev. B 69, No.3, 0353XX (2004
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