The spin-1/2 quantum antiferromagnet on the Kagome lattice provides a
quintessential example in the strongly correlated electron physics where both
effects of geometric frustration and quantum fluctuation are pushed to their
limit. Among possible non-magnetic ground states, the valence bond solid (VBS)
with a 36-site unit cell is one of the most promising candidates. A natural
theoretical framework for the analysis of such VBS order is to consider quantum
states on a bond connecting the nearest-neighboring sites as fundamental
quantum modes of the system and treat them as effectively independent "bond
particles." While correctly describing the VBS order in the ground state, this
approach, known as the bond operator theory, significantly overestimates the
lowest spin excitation energy. To overcome this problem, we take a next logical
step in this paper to improve the bond operator theory and consider extended
spin clusters as fundamental building blocks of the system. Depending on two
possible configurations of the VBS order, various spin clusters are considered:
(i) in the VBS order with staggered hexagonal resonance, we consider one spin
cluster for a David star and two spin clusters with each composed of a perfect
hexagon and three attached dimers, and (ii) in the VBS order with uniform
hexagonal resonance, one spin cluster composed of a David star and three
attached dimers. It is shown that the majority of low-energy spin excitations
are nearly or perfectly flat in energy. With most of its weight coming from the
David star, the lowest spin excitation has a gap much lower than the previous
value obtained by the bond operator theory, narrowing the difference against
exact diagonalization results.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures, 6 table