Rank-2 Coulomb Spin Liquids from Classical Spins
Invited
Abstract
Coulomb spin liquids are well studied spin liquid states exhibiting emergent electromagnetism, having a coarse-grained description corresponding to Maxwell's laws. It has recently been appreciated that even more exotic scenarios are possible, realizing generalizations of electromagnetism with rank-2 electric and magnetic fields. These are of particular interest since the emergent charges of the rank-2 electromagnetism can be fractons, with fundamentally constrained mobility.
In this talk I will describe an approach to finding simple, bilinear models, for classical spins which realize rank-2 Coulomb phases at low temperature [1,2]. Such models provide access to rank-2 Coulomb phase physics in a setting amenable to efficient numerical study and also suggest directions to look for rank-2 Coulomb phases in experiment.
Remarkably, we find that a traceless, vector-charged, rank-2 Coulomb phase can be generated by perturbing a simple Heisenberg model on the pyrochlore lattice with breathing anisotropy and weak Dzyalozhinskii-Moriya interactions [2]. This enables us to identify Yb-based breathing pyrochlores as potential candidate systems and to make explicit predictions for how the rank-2 Coulomb phase would manifest itself in experiment.
[1] O. Benton, L. D.C. Jaubert, H. Yan and N. Shannon, Nature Commun. 7, 11572 (2016)
[2] H. Yan, O. Benton, L. D.C. Jaubert and N. Shannon, arXiv:1902.10934
In this talk I will describe an approach to finding simple, bilinear models, for classical spins which realize rank-2 Coulomb phases at low temperature [1,2]. Such models provide access to rank-2 Coulomb phase physics in a setting amenable to efficient numerical study and also suggest directions to look for rank-2 Coulomb phases in experiment.
Remarkably, we find that a traceless, vector-charged, rank-2 Coulomb phase can be generated by perturbing a simple Heisenberg model on the pyrochlore lattice with breathing anisotropy and weak Dzyalozhinskii-Moriya interactions [2]. This enables us to identify Yb-based breathing pyrochlores as potential candidate systems and to make explicit predictions for how the rank-2 Coulomb phase would manifest itself in experiment.
[1] O. Benton, L. D.C. Jaubert, H. Yan and N. Shannon, Nature Commun. 7, 11572 (2016)
[2] H. Yan, O. Benton, L. D.C. Jaubert and N. Shannon, arXiv:1902.10934
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Presenters
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Owen Benton
Riken center for Emergent Matter Science, Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems
Authors
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Owen Benton
Riken center for Emergent Matter Science, Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems
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Han Yan
Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology, Okinawa Inst of Sci & Tech
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Ludovic DC Jaubert
CNRS-Bordeaux, CNRS Bordeaux, CNRS, University of Bordeaux, CRNS, LOMA, University of Bordeaux
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Nicholas Shannon
Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology