1,114 research outputs found
Susceptibility of the 2D S=1/2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet with an impurity
We use a quantum Monte Carlo method (stochastic series expansion) to study
the effects of a magnetic or nonmagnetic impurity on the magnetic
susceptibility of the two-dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnet. At low
temperatures, we find a log-divergent contribution to the transverse
susceptibility. We also introduce an effective few-spin model that can
quantitatively capture the differences between magnetic and nonmagnetic
impurities at high and intermediate temperatures.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, v2: Updated data in figures, minor changes in
text, v3: Final version, cosmetic change
Impurity effects at finite temperature in the two-dimensional S=1/2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet
We discuss effects of various impurities on the magnetic susceptibility and
the specific heat of the quantum S=1/2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet on a
two-dimensional square lattice. For impurities with spin S_i > 0 (here S_i=1/2
in the case of a vacancy or an added spin, and S_i=1 for a spin coupled
ferromagnetically to its neighbors), our quantum Monte Carlo simulations
confirm a classical-like Curie susceptibility contribution S_i^2/4T, which
originates from an alignment of the impurity spin with the local N\'eel order.
In addition, we find a logarithmically divergent contribution, which we
attribute to fluctuations transverse to the local N\'eel vector. We also study
frustrated and nonfrustrated bond impurities with S_i=0. For a simple intuitive
picture of the impurity problem, we discuss an effective few-spin model that
can distinguish between the different impurities and reproduces the
leading-order simulation data over a wide temperature range.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, submitted to PRB. v2, published version with
cosmetic change
Accessing the dynamics of large many-particle systems using Stochastic Series Expansion
The Stochastic Series Expansion method (SSE) is a Quantum Monte Carlo (QMC)
technique working directly in the imaginary time continuum and thus avoiding
"Trotter discretization" errors. Using a non-local "operator-loop update" it
allows treating large quantum mechanical systems of many thousand sites. In
this paper we first give a comprehensive review on SSE and present benchmark
calculations of SSE's scaling behavior with system size and inverse
temperature, and compare it to the loop algorithm, whose scaling is known to be
one of the best of all QMC methods. Finally we introduce a new and efficient
algorithm to measure Green's functions and thus dynamical properties within
SSE.Comment: 11 RevTeX pages including 7 figures and 5 table
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