91 research outputs found
Classical and quantum theories of proton disorder in hexagonal water ice
It has been known since the pioneering work of Bernal, Fowler and Pauling
that common, hexagonal (Ih) water ice is the archetype of a frustrated material
: a proton-bonded network in which protons satisfy strong local constraints -
the "ice rules" - but do not order. While this proton disorder is well
established, there is now a growing body of evidence that quantum effects may
also have a role to play in the physics of ice at low temperatures. In this
Article we use a combination of numerical and analytic techniques to explore
the nature of proton correlations in both classical and quantum models of ice
Ih. In the case of classical ice Ih, we find that the ice rules have two,
distinct, consequences for scattering experiments - singular "pinch points",
reflecting a zero-divergence condition on the uniform polarization of the
crystal, and broad, asymmetric features, coming from its staggered
polarisation. In the case of the quantum model, we find that the collective
quantum tunnelling of groups of protons can convert states obeying the ice
rules into a quantum liquid, whose excitations are birefringent, emergent
photons. We make explicit predictions for scattering experiments on both
classical and quantum ice Ih, and show how the quantum theory can explain the
"wings" of incoherent inelastic scattering observed in recent neutron
scattering experiments [Bove et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 165901 (2009)].
These results raise the intriguing possibility that the protons in ice Ih could
form a quantum liquid at low temperatures, in which protons are not merely
disordered, but continually fluctuate between different configurations obeying
the ice rules.Comment: 33 pages (21 in main text), 13 figures (9 in main text), expanded
discussion of experiment with new subsection on thermodynamic
Extended quantum U(1)-liquid phase in a three-dimensional quantum dimer model
Recently, quantum dimer models, in which the system can tunnel between
different classical dimer configurations, have attracted a great deal of
interest as a paradigm for the study of exotic quantum phases. Much of this
excitement has centred on the claim that a certain class of quantum dimer
model, defined on a bipartite lattice, can support a quantum U(1)-liquid phase
with deconfined fractional excitations in three dimensions. These fractional
monomer excitations are quantum analogues of the magnetic monopoles found in
spin ice. In this article we use extensive quantum Monte Carlo simulations to
establish the ground-state phase diagram of the quantum dimer model on the
three-dimensional, bipartite, diamond lattice as a function of the ratio {\mu}
of the potential to kinetic energy terms in the Hamiltonian. We find that, for
{\mu}_c = 0.75 +/- 0.04, the model undergoes a first-order quantum phase
transition from an ordered "R-state" into an extended quantum U(1)-liquid
phase, which terminates in a quantum critical "RK point" for {\mu}=1. This
confirms the published field-theoretical scenario. We present detailed evidence
for the existence of the U(1)-liquid phase, and indirect evidence for the
existence of its photon and monopole excitations. We also explore some of the
technical ramifications of this analysis, benchmarking quantum Monte Carlo
against a variety of exact and perturbative results, comparing different
variational wave functions. The ergodicity of the quantum dimer model on a
diamond lattice is discussed in detail. These results complete and extend the
analysis previously published in [O. Sikora et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 103,
247001 (2009)].Comment: 19 pages, 25 figures - we added a new figure and updated the
manuscrip
Seeing the light : experimental signatures of emergent electromagnetism in a quantum spin ice
The "spin ice" state found in the rare earth pyrochlore magnets Ho2Ti2O7 and
Dy2Ti2O7 offers a beautiful realisation of classical magnetostatics, complete
with magnetic monopole excitations. It has been suggested that in "quantum spin
ice" materials, quantum-mechanical tunnelling between different ice
configurations could convert the magnetostatics of spin ice into a quantum spin
liquid which realises a fully dynamical, lattice-analogue of quantum
electromagnetism. Here we explore how such a state might manifest itself in
experiment, within the minimal microscopic model of a such a quantum spin ice.
We develop a lattice field theory for this model, and use this to make explicit
predictions for the dynamical structure factor which would be observed in
neutron scattering experiments on a quantum spin ice. We find that "pinch
points", seen in quasi-elastic scattering, which are the signal feature of a
classical spin ice, fade away as a quantum ice is cooled to its
zero-temperature ground state. We also make explicit predictions for the
ghostly, linearly dispersing magnetic excitations which are the "photons" of
this emergent electromagnetism. The predictions of this field theory are shown
to be in quantitative agreement with Quantum Monte Carlo simulations at zero
temperature.Comment: 26 pages, 18 figures, minor revision
Variational Monte Carlo simulations using tensor-product projected states
We propose an efficient numerical method, which combines the advantages of
recently developed tensor-network based methods and standard trial wave
functions, to study the ground state properties of quantum many-body systems.
In this approach, we apply a projector in the form of a tensor-product operator
to an input wave function, such as a Jastrow-type or Hartree-Fock wave
function, and optimize the tensor elements via variational Monte Carlo. The
entanglement already contained in the input wave function can considerably
reduce the bond dimensions compared to the regular tensor-product state
representation. In particular, this allows us to also represent states that do
not obey the area law of entanglement entropy. In addition, for fermionic
systems, the fermion sign structure can be encoded in the input wave function.
We show that the optimized states provide good approximations of the
ground-state energy and correlation functions in the cases of two-dimensional
bosonic and fermonic systems.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, published versio
A quantum liquid with deconfined fractional excitations in three dimensions
Excitations which carry "fractional" quantum numbers are known to exist in
one dimension in polyacetylene, and in two dimensions, in the fractional
quantum Hall effect. Fractional excitations have also been invoked to explain
the breakdown of the conventional theory of metals in a wide range of
three-dimensional materials. However the existence of fractional excitations in
three dimensions remains highly controversial. In this Letter we report direct
numerical evidence for the existence of a quantum liquid phase supporting
fractional excitations in a concrete, three-dimensional microscopic model - the
quantum dimer model on a diamond lattice. We demonstrate explicitly that the
energy cost of separating fractional monomer excitations vanishes in this
liquid phase, and that its energy spectrum matches that of the Coulomb phase in
(3+1) dimensional quantum electrodynamics.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; revised version, new figures; accepted for
publication in Physical Review Letter
Density functional theory study of Au-fcc/Ge and Au-hcp/Ge interfaces
In recent years, nanostructures with hexagonal polytypes of gold have been synthesised, opening new possibilities in nanoscience and nanotechnology. As bulk gold crystallizes in the fcc phase, surface effects can play an important role in stabilizing hexagonal gold nanostructures. Here, we investigate several heterostructures with Ge substrates, including the fcc and hcp phases of gold that have been observed experimentally. We determine and discuss their interfacial energies and optimized atomic arrangements, comparing the theory results with available experimental data. Our DFT calculations for the Au-fcc(011)/Ge(001) junction show how the presence of defects in the interface layer can help to stabilize the atomic pattern, consistent with microscopic images. Although the Au-hcp/Ge interface is characterized by a similar interface energy, it reveals large atomic displacements due to significant mismatch. Finally, analyzing the electronic properties, we demonstrate that Au/Ge systems have metallic character, but covalent-like bonding states between interfacial Ge and Au atoms are also present
Origin of monoclinic distortion and its impact on the electronic properties in KO
We use the density functional theory and lattice dynamics calculations to
investigate the properties of potassium superoxide KO in which spin,
orbital, and lattice degrees of freedom are interrelated and determine the
low-temperature phase. After calculating phonon dispersion relations in the
high-temperature tetragonal structure, we identify a soft phonon mode
leading to the monoclinic symmetry and optimize the crystal geometry
resulting from this mode. Thus we reveal a displacive character of the
structural transition with the group-subgroup relation between the tetragonal
and monoclinic phases. We compare the electronic structure of KO with
antiferromagnetic spin order in the tetragonal and monoclinic phases. We
emphasize that realistic treatment of the electronic structure requires
including the local Coulomb interaction in the valence orbitals of the
O ions. The presence of the `Hubbard' leads to the gap opening at the
Fermi energy in the tetragonal structure without orbital order but with weak
spin-orbit interaction. We remark that the gap opening in the tetragonal phase
could also be obtained when the orbital order is initiated in the calculations
with a realistic value of . Finally, we show that the local Coulomb
interactions and the finite lattice distortion, which together lead to the
orbital order via the Jahn-Teller effect, are responsible for the enhanced
insulating gap in the monoclinic structure.Comment: accepted by Physical Review
Children’s Voices in the Polish Canon Wars: Participatory Research in Action
Despite its rightful concern with childhood as an essentialist cultural construct, the field of children’s literature studies has tended to accept the endemicity of asymmetrical power relations between children and adults. It is only recently, under the influence of children’s rights discourses, that children’s literature scholars have developed concepts reflecting their recognition of more egalitarian relationships between children and adults. This essay is a result of the collaboration between child and adult researchers and represents a scholarly practice based on an intergenerational democratic dialog in which children’s voices are respected for their intrinsic salience. The presence of child researchers in children’s literature studies confirms an important shift currently taking place in our field, providing evidence for the impossibility of regarding children’s literature only as a manifestation of adult power over young generations
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