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We have measured the specific heat of the coupled spin-dimer antiferromagnet Ba$_3$Mn$_2$O$_8$ to 50 mK in temperature and to 29 T in the magnetic field. The experiment extends to the midpoint of the field region (25.9 T $leq H leq$ 32.3 T) of the magnetization plateau at 1/2 of the saturation magnetization, and reveals the presence of three ordered phases in the field region between that of the magnetization plateau and the low-field spin-liquid region. The exponent of the phase boundary with the thermally disordered region is smaller than the theoretical value based on the Bose-Einstein condensation of spin triplets. At zero field and 29 T, the specific-heat data show gapped behaviors characteristic of spin liquids. The zero-field data indicate that the gapped triplet excitations form two levels whose energies differ by nearly a factor of two. At least the lower level is well localized. The data at 29 T reveal that the low-lying excitations at the magnetization plateau are weakly delocalized.
Magnetic susceptibility and the magnetization process have been measured in green polycrystal. In this compound, the magnetic manganese ion exists as Mn$^{5+}$ in a tetrahedral environment, and thus the magnetic interaction can be described by an S=1
Measuring the specific heat of herbertsmithite single crystals in high magnetic fields (up to $34$ T) allows us to isolate the low-temperature kagome contribution while shifting away extrinsic Schottky-like contributions. The kagome contribution foll
The quantum spin liquid (QSL) is an exotic phase of magnetic materials where the spins continue to fluctuate without any symmetry breaking down to zero temperature. Among the handful reports of QSL with spin $Sge$1, examples with magnetic ions on a t
We have discovered a novel candidate for a spin liquid state in a ruthenium oxide composed of dimers of $S = $ 3/2 spins of Ru$^{5+}$,Ba$_3$ZnRu$_2$O$_9$. This compound lacks a long range order down to 37 mK, which is a temperature 5000-times lower t
The magnetic properties of the two-dimensional, S=1 honeycomb antiferromagnet BaNi$_2$V$_2$O$_8$ have been comprehensively studied using DC susceptibility measurements and inelastic neutron scattering techniques. The magnetic excitation spectrum is f