145 research outputs found

    Extracting the Mott gap from energy measurements in trapped atomic gases

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    We show that the measure of the so-called {\it release-energy}, which is an experimentally accessible quantity, makes it possible to assess the value of the Mott gap in the presence of the confinement potential that is unavoidable in the actual experimental setup. Indeed, the curve of the release-energy as a function of the total number of particles shows kinks that are directly related to the existence of excitation gaps. Calculations are presented within the Gutzwiller approach, but the final results go beyond this simple approximation and represent a genuine feature of the real system. In the case of harmonic confinement, the Mott gaps may be renormalized with respect to the uniform case. On the other hand, in the case of the recently proposed off-diagonal confinement, our results show an almost perfect agreement with the homogeneous case.Comment: 4 pages and 5 figure

    Nagaoka ferromagnetism in the two-dimensional infinite-U Hubbard model

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    We present different numerical calculations based on variational quantum Monte Carlo simulations supporting a ferromagnetic ground-state for finite and small hole densities in the two-dimensional infinite-UU Hubbard model. Moreover, by studying the energies of different total spin sectors, these calculations strongly suggest that the paramagnetic phase is unstable against a phase with a partial polarization for large hole densities Ύ∌0.40\delta \sim 0.40 with evidence for a second-order transition to the paramagnetic large doping phase.Comment: 4 page

    Quantum Phase Transition in Coupled Spin Ladders

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    The ground state of an array of coupled, spin-half, antiferromagnetic ladders is studied using spin-wave theory, exact diagonalization (up to 36 sites) and quantum Monte Carlo techniques (up to 256 sites). Our results clearly indicate the occurrence of a zero-temperature phase transition between a N\'eel ordered and a non-magnetic phase at a finite value of the inter-ladder coupling (αc≃0.3\alpha_c\simeq0.3). This transition is marked by remarkable changes in the structure of the excitation spectrum.Comment: 4 pages, 6 postscript figures, to appear in Physical Review

    Ground-state properties of the disordered Hubbard model in two dimensions

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    We study the interplay between electron correlation and disorder in the two-dimensional Hubbard model at half-filling by means of a variational wave function that can interpolate between Anderson and Mott insulators. We give a detailed description of our improved variational state and explain how the physics of the Anderson-Mott transition can be inferred from equal-time correlations functions, which can be easily computed within the variational Monte Carlo scheme. The ground-state phase diagram is worked out in both the paramagnetic and the magnetic sector. Whereas in the former a direct second-order Anderson-Mott transition is obtained, when magnetism is allowed variationally, we find evidence for the formation of local magnetic moments that order before the Mott transition. Although the localization length increases before the Mott transition, we have no evidence for the stabilization of a true metallic phase. The effect of a frustrating next-nearest-neighbor hopping tâ€Čt^\prime is also studied in some detail. In particular, we show that tâ€Čt^\prime has two primary effects. The first one is the narrowing of the stability region of the magnetic Anderson insulator, also leading to a first-order magnetic transition. The second and most important effect of a frustrating hopping term is the development of a ``glassy'' phase at strong couplings, where many paramagnetic states, with disordered local moments, may be stabilized.Comment: 13 pages and 16 figure

    Vanishing spin gap in a competing spin-liquid phase in the kagome Heisenberg antiferromagnet

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    We provide strong numerical evidence, using improved variational wave functions, for a ground state with vanishing spin gap in the spin-1/21/2 quantum Heisenberg model on the kagome lattice. Starting from the algebraic U(1)U(1) Dirac spin liquid state proposed by Y. Ran etal.et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 9898, 117205117205 (20072007)] and iteratively applying a few Lanczos steps, we compute the lowest S=2S=2 excitation constructed by exciting spinons close to the Dirac nodes. Our results are compatible with a vanishing spin gap in the thermodynamic limit and in consonance with a power-law decay of long distance spin-spin correlations in real space. The competition with a gapped (topological) spin liquid is discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables. Published versio

    Projected wave function study of Z2 spin liquids on the kagome lattice for the spin-1/2 quantum Heisenberg antiferromagnet

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    Motivated by recent density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG) calculations [Yan, Huse, and White, Science 332, 1173 (2011)], which claimed that the ground state of the nearest-neighbor spin-1/2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet on the kagome lattice geometry is a fully gapped spin liquid with numerical signatures of Z2 gauge structure, and a further theoretical work [Lu, Ran, and Lee, Phys. Rev. B 83, 224413 (2011)], which gave a classification of all Schwinger-fermion mean-field fully symmetric Z2 spin liquids on the kagome lattice, we have thoroughly studied Gutzwiller-projected fermionic wave functions by using quantum variational Monte Carlo techniques, hence implementing exactly the constraint of one fermion per site. In particular, we investigated the energetics of all Z2 candidates (gapped and gapless) that lie in the neighborhood of the energetically competitive U(1) gapless spin liquids. By using a state-of-the-art optimization method, we were able to conclusively show that the U(1) Dirac state is remarkably stable with respect to all Z2 spin liquids in its neighborhood, and in particular for opening a gap toward the so-called Z2[0,{\pi}]{\beta} state, which was conjectured to describe the ground state obtained by the DMRG method. Finally, we also considered the addition of a small second nearest-neighbor exchange coupling of both antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic type, and obtained similar results, namely, a U(1) Dirac spin-liquid ground state.Comment: 5 pages + supplementary material (2 pages), 3 figures, 1 Table: Final published version, selected as an Editor's suggestio

    Electronic properties driven by strong correlation

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    The fascinating subject of superconductivity was opened over a century ago by Onnes [1], but until quite recently it was strictly a low-temperature phenomenon. The discovery of the cuprate superconductors [2] in a family of transition metal oxides, with transition temperatures up to Tc ~ 100K, has generated tremendous excitement for two main reasons. First, from a practical point of view, these compounds open a new temperature realm for superconducting devices which may have interesting commercial applications, and these potential benefits have attracted extraordinary attention from the whole scientific community. The second reason, relevant to those in a more abstract field, is the interest in the microscopic mechanism driving superconductivity

    Valence-bond crystal in the extended kagome spin-1/2 quantum Heisenberg antiferromagnet: A variational Monte Carlo approach

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    The highly-frustrated spin-1/2 quantum Heisenberg model with both nearest (J1J_1) and next-nearest (J2J_2) neighbor exchange interactions is revisited by using an extended variational space of projected wave functions that are optimized with state-of-the-art methods. Competition between modulated valence-bond crystals (VBCs) proposed in the literature and the Dirac spin liquid (DSL) is investigated. We find that the addition of a {\it small} ferromagnetic next-nearest-neighbor exchange coupling ∣J2∣>0.09J1|J_2|>0.09 J_1 leads to stabilization of a 36-site unit cell VBC, although the DSL remains a local minimum of the variational parameter landscape. This implies that the VBC is not trivially connected to the DSL: instead it possesses a non-trivial flux pattern and large dimerization.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    From magnetism to one-dimensional spin liquid in the anisotropic triangular lattice

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    We investigate the anisotropic triangular lattice that interpolates from decoupled one-dimensional chains to the isotropic triangular lattice and has been suggested to be relevant for various quasi-two-dimensional materials, such as Cs2_2CuCl4_4 or Îș\kappa-(ET)2_2Cu2_2(CN)3_3, an organic material that shows intriguing magnetic properties. We obtain an excellent accuracy by means of a novel representation for the resonating valence bond wave function with both singlet and triplet pairing. This approach allows us to establish that the magnetic order is rapidly destroyed away from the pure triangular lattice and incommensurate spin correlations are short range. A non-magnetic spin liquid naturally emerges in a wide range of the phase diagram, with strong one-dimensional character. The relevance of the triplet pairing for Îș\kappa-(ET)2_2Cu2_2(CN)3_3 is also discussed.Comment: 4+epsilon pages, 6 figure

    Spin-12\frac{1}{2} Heisenberg J1J_1-J2J_2 antiferromagnet on the kagome lattice

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    We report variational Monte Carlo calculations for the spin-12\frac{1}{2} Heisenberg model on the kagome lattice in the presence of both nearest-neighbor J1J_1 and next-nearest-neighbor J2J_2 antiferromagnetic superexchange couplings. Our approach is based upon Gutzwiller projected fermionic states that represent a flexible tool to describe quantum spin liquids with different properties (e.g., gapless and gapped). We show that, on finite clusters, a gapped Z2\mathbb{Z}_{2} spin liquid can be stabilized in the presence of a finite J2J_2 superexchange, with a substantial energy gain with respect to the gapless U(1)U(1) Dirac spin liquid. However, this energy gain vanishes in the thermodynamic limit, implying that, at least within this approach, the U(1)U(1) Dirac spin liquid remains stable in a relatively large region of the phase diagram. For J2/J1≳0.3J_2/J_1 \gtrsim 0.3, we find that a magnetically ordered state with q=0{\bf q}={\bf 0} overcomes the magnetically disordered wave functions, suggesting the end of the putative gapless spin-liquid phase.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Published versio
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