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Effective Model for Rare-earth Kitaev Materials and its Classical Monte Carlo Simulation

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 Added by Mengjie Sun
 Publication date 2021
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Recently, the family of rare-earth chalcohalides were proposed as candidate compounds to realize the Kitaev spin liquid (KSL). In the present work, we firstly propose an effective spin Hamiltonian consistents with the symmetry group of the crystal structure. Then we apply classical Monte Carlo simulations to preliminarily study the model and establish a phase diagram. When approaching to the low temperature limit, several magnetic long range orders are observed, including the stripe, the zigzag, the antiferromagnetic (AFM), the ferromagnetic (FM), the incommensurate spiral (IS), the Multi-$pmb {Q}$ and the 120{deg}. We further calculate the thermodynamic properties of the system, such as the temperature dependence of the magnetic susceptibility and the heat capacity. The ordering transition temperatures reflected in the two quantities agree with each other. For most interaction regions, the system is magnetically more susceptible in the $ab$-plane than in the $c$-direction. The stripe phase is special, where the susceptibility is fairly isotropic in the whole temperature region. These features provide useful information to understand the magnetic properties of related materials.



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Alkali metal rare-earth chalcogenide $ARECh2$ (A=alkali or monovalent metal, RE=rare earth, Ch=O, S, Se, Te), is a large family of quantum spin liquid (QSL) candidates we discovered recently. Unlike $YbMgGaO4$, most members in the family except for the oxide ones, have relatively small crystalline electric-field (CEF) excitation levels, particularly the first ones. This makes the conventional Curie-Weiss analysis at finite temperatures inapplicable and CEF excitations may play an essential role in understanding the low-energy spin physics. Here we considered an effective magnetic Hamiltonian incorporating CEF excitations and spin-spin interactions, to accurately describe thermodynamics in such a system. By taking $NaYbSe2$ as an example, we were able to analyze magnetic susceptibility, magnetization under pulsed high fields and heat capacity in a systematic and comprehensive way. The analysis allows us to produce accurate anisotropic exchange coupling energies and unambiguously determine a crossover temperature ($sim$25 K in the case of $NaYbSe2$), below which CEF effects fade away and pure spin-spin interactions stand out. We further validated the effective picture by successfully explaining the anomalous temperature dependence of electron spin resonance (ESR) spectral width. The effective scenario in principle can be generalized to other rare-earth spin systems with small CEF excitations.
50 - Simon Trebst 2017
In transition-metal compounds with partially filled $4d$ and $5d$ shells spin-orbit entanglement, electronic correlations, and crystal-field effects conspire to give rise to a variety of novel forms of topological quantum matter. This includes Kitaev materials -- a family of spin-orbit assisted Mott insulators, in which local, spin-orbit entangled $j=1/2$ moments form that are subject to strong bond-directional interactions. On a conceptual level, Kitaev materials attract much interest for their unconventional forms of magnetism, such as spin liquid physics in two- and three-dimensional lattice geometries or the formation of non-trivial spin textures. Experimentally, a number of Kitaev materials have been synthesized, which includes the honeycomb materials Na$_2$IrO$_3$, $alpha$-Li$_2$IrO$_3$, and RuCl$_3$, the triangular materials Ba$_3$Ir$_x$Ti$_{3-x}$O$_9$, as well as the three-dimensional hyper-honeycomb and stripy-honeycomb materials $beta$-Li$_2$IrO$_3$ and $gamma$-Li$_2$IrO$_3$. These lecture notes provide a short review of the current status of the theoretical and experimental exploration of these Kitaev materials.
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