154 research outputs found

    Complete bond-operator theory of the two-chain spin ladder

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    The discovery of the almost ideal, two-chain spin-ladder material (C_5H_12N)_2CuBr_4 has once again focused attention on this most fundamental problem in low-dimensional quantum magnetism. Within the bond-operator framework, three qualitative advances are introduced which extend the theory to all finite temperatures and magnetic fields in the gapped regime. This systematic description permits quantitative and parameter-free experimental comparisons, which are presented for the specific heat, and predictions for thermal renormalization of the triplet magnon excitations.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure

    Dimensional reduction by pressure in the magnetic framework material CuF2_{2}(D2_{2}O)2_{2}pyz: from spin-wave to spinon excitations

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    Metal organic magnets have enormous potential to host a variety of electronic and magnetic phases that originate from a strong interplay between the spin, orbital and lattice degrees of freedom. We control this interplay in the quantum magnet CuF2_2(D2_2O)2_2pyz by using high pressure to drive the system through a structural and magnetic phase transition. Using neutron scattering, we show that the low pressure state, which hosts a two-dimensional square lattice with spin-wave excitations and a dominant exchange coupling of 0.89 meV, transforms at high pressure into a one-dimensional spin-chain hallmarked by a spinon continuum and a reduced exchange interaction of 0.43 meV. This direct microscopic observation of a magnetic dimensional crossover as a function of pressure opens up new possibilities for studying the evolution of fractionalised excitations in low dimensional quantum magnets and eventually pressure-controlled metal--insulator transitions

    Ehrenfest relations and magnetoelastic effects in field-induced ordered phases

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    Magnetoelastic properties in field-induced magnetic ordered phases are studied theoretically based on a Ginzburg-Landau theory. A critical field for the field-induced ordered phase is obtained as a function of temperature and pressure, which determine the phase diagram. It is found that magnetic field dependence of elastic constant decreases discontinuously at the critical field, Hc, and that it decreases linearly with field in the ordered phase (H>Hc). We found an Ehrenfest relation between the field dependence of the elastic constant and the pressure dependence of critical field. Our theory provides the theoretical form for magnetoelastic properties in field- and pressure-induced ordered phases.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure

    Quantum and classical criticality in a dimerized quantum antiferromagnet

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    A quantum critical point (QCP) is a singularity in the phase diagram arising due to quantum mechanical fluctuations. The exotic properties of some of the most enigmatic physical systems, including unconventional metals and superconductors, quantum magnets, and ultracold atomic condensates, have been related to the importance of the critical quantum and thermal fluctuations near such a point. However, direct and continuous control of these fluctuations has been difficult to realize, and complete thermodynamic and spectroscopic information is required to disentangle the effects of quantum and classical physics around a QCP. Here we achieve this control in a high-pressure, high-resolution neutron scattering experiment on the quantum dimer material TlCuCl3. By measuring the magnetic excitation spectrum across the entire quantum critical phase diagram, we illustrate the similarities between quantum and thermal melting of magnetic order. We prove the critical nature of the unconventional longitudinal ("Higgs") mode of the ordered phase by damping it thermally. We demonstrate the development of two types of criticality, quantum and classical, and use their static and dynamic scaling properties to conclude that quantum and thermal fluctuations can behave largely independently near a QCP.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Original version, published version available from Nature Physics websit

    Quantum Statistics of Interacting Dimer Spin Systems

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    The compound TlCuCl3 represents a model system of dimerized quantum spins with strong interdimer interactions. We investigate the triplet dispersion as a function of temperature by inelastic neutron scattering experiments on single crystals. By comparison with a number of theoretical approaches we demonstrate that the description of Troyer, Tsunetsugu, and Wuertz [Phys. Rev. B 50, 13515 (1994)] provides an appropriate quantum statistical model for dimer spin systems at finite temperatures, where many-body correlations become particularly important.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Physical Review Letter

    Microscopic model for the magnetization plateaus in NH4CuCl3

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    A simple model consisting of three distinct dimer sublattices is proposed to describe the magnetism of NH4CuCl3. It explains the occurrence of magnetization plateaus only at 1/4 and 3/4 of the saturation magnetization. The field dependence of the excitation modes observed by ESR measurements is also explained by the model. The model predicts that the magnetization plateaus should disappear under high pressure.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, REVTeX

    Multiple Magnon Modes and Consequences for the Bose-Einstein Condensed Phase in BaCuSi2O6

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    The compound BaCuSi2O6 is a quantum magnet with antiferromagnetic dimers of S = 1/2 moments on a quasi-2D square lattice. We have investigated its spin dynamics by inelastic neutron scattering experiments on single crystals with an energy resolution considerably higher than in an earlier study. We observe multiple magnon modes, indicating clearly the presence of magnetically inequivalent dimer sites. This more complex spin Hamiltonian leads to a distinct form of magnon Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) phase with a spatially modulated condensate amplitude.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. Let

    Spinon localization in the heat transport of the spin-1/2 ladder compound (C5_5H12_{12}N)2_2CuBr4_4

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    We present experiments on the magnetic field-dependent thermal transport in the spin-1/2 ladder system (C5_5H12_{12}N)2_2CuBr4_4. The thermal conductivity Îș(B)\kappa(B) is only weakly affected by the field-induced transitions between the gapless Luttinger-liquid state realized for Bc1<B<Bc2B_{c1}< B < B_{c2} and the gapped states, suggesting the absence of a direct contribution of the spin excitations to the heat transport. We observe, however, that the thermal conductivity is strongly suppressed by the magnetic field deeply within the Luttinger-liquid state. These surprising observations are discussed in terms of localization of spinons within finite ladder segments and spinon-phonon umklapp scattering of the predominantly phononic heat transport.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Pressure-induced electronic phase separation of magnetism and superconductivity in CrAs

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    The recent discovery of pressure induced superconductivity in the binary helimagnet CrAs has attracted much attention. How superconductivity emerges from the magnetic state and what is the mechanism of the superconducting pairing are two important issues which need to be resolved. In the present work, the suppression of magnetism and the occurrence of superconductivity in CrAs as a function of pressure (pp) were studied by means of muon spin rotation. The magnetism remains bulk up to p≃3.5p\simeq3.5~kbar while its volume fraction gradually decreases with increasing pressure until it vanishes at p≃p\simeq7~kbar. At 3.5 kbar superconductivity abruptly appears with its maximum Tc≃1.2T_c \simeq 1.2~K which decreases upon increasing the pressure. In the intermediate pressure region (3.5â‰Čpâ‰Č73.5\lesssim p\lesssim 7~kbar) the superconducting and the magnetic volume fractions are spatially phase separated and compete for phase volume. Our results indicate that the less conductive magnetic phase provides additional carriers (doping) to the superconducting parts of the CrAs sample thus leading to an increase of the transition temperature (TcT_c) and of the superfluid density (ρs\rho_s). A scaling of ρs\rho_s with Tc3.2T_c^{3.2} as well as the phase separation between magnetism and superconductivity point to a conventional mechanism of the Cooper-pairing in CrAs.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
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