10 research outputs found
Dynamics and Transport in Random Antiferromagnetic Spin Chains
We present the first results on the low-frequency dynamical and transport
properties of random antiferromagnetic spin chains at low temperature (). We
obtain the momentum and frequency dependent dynamic structure factor in the
Random Singlet (RS) phases of both spin-1/2 and spin-1 chains, as well as in
the Random Dimer phase of spin-1/2 chains. We also show that the RS phases are
unusual `spin-metals' with divergent low-frequency conductivity at T=0, and
follow the spin conductivity through `metal-insulator' transitions tuned by the
strength of dimerization or Ising anisotropy in the spin-1/2 case, and by the
strength of disorder in the spin-1 case.Comment: 4 pages (two-column format). Presentation substantially revised to
accomodate new result
Frequency-Dependent Conductivity in NbSe3
The observation of a frequency-dependent conductivity (σ) and dielectric constant (ε) in NbSe3 is reported. In both charge-density-wave phases a strong frequency dependence and huge dielectric constant are observed below 100 MHz, with greatest effects observed at 42 K. The conductivity σ increases smoothly from the dc value to the high-frequency (f=100 MHz) limit; this increase is accompanied by the reduction of ε. A resistance-capacitance network model is suggested to account for the observed frequency dependence
Dynamics and transport in random quantum systems governed by strong-randomness fixed points
We present results on the low-frequency dynamical and transport properties of
random quantum systems whose low temperature (), low-energy behavior is
controlled by strong disorder fixed points. We obtain the momentum and
frequency dependent dynamic structure factor in the Random Singlet (RS) phases
of both spin-1/2 and spin-1 random antiferromagnetic chains, as well as in the
Random Dimer (RD) and Ising Antiferromagnetic (IAF) phases of spin-1/2 random
antiferromagnetic chains. We show that the RS phases are unusual `spin metals'
with divergent low-frequency spin conductivity at T=0, and we also follow the
conductivity through novel `metal-insulator' transitions tuned by the strength
of dimerization or Ising anisotropy in the spin-1/2 case, and by the strength
of disorder in the spin-1 case. We work out the average spin and energy
autocorrelations in the one-dimensional random transverse field Ising model in
the vicinity of its quantum critical point. All of the above calculations are
valid in the frequency dominated regime \omega \agt T, and rely on previously
available renormalization group schemes that describe these systems in terms of
the properties of certain strong-disorder fixed point theories. In addition, we
obtain some information about the behavior of the dynamic structure factor and
dynamical conductivity in the opposite `hydrodynamic' regime for
the special case of spin-1/2 chains close to the planar limit (the quantum x-y
model) by analyzing the corresponding quantities in an equivalent model of
spinless fermions with weak repulsive interactions and particle-hole symmetric
disorder.Comment: Long version (with many additional results) of Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf
84}, 3434 (2000) (available as cond-mat/9904290); two-column format, 33 pages
and 8 figure
Random interactions and spin-glass thermodynamic transition in the hole-doped Haldane system YCaBaNiO
Magnetization, DC and AC bulk susceptibility of the =1 Haldane chain
system doped with electronic holes, YCaBaNiO
(0x0.20), have been measured and analyzed. The most striking
results are (i) a sub-Curie power law behavior of the linear susceptibility,
, for temperature lower than the Haldane gap
of the undoped compound (x=0) (ii) the existence of a spin-glass thermodynamic
transition at = 2-3 K. These findings are consistent with (i) random
couplings within the chains between the spin degrees of freedom induced by hole
doping, (ii) the existence of ferromagnetic bonds that induce magnetic
frustration when interchain interactions come into play at low temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.