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Emergence of spin singlets with inhomogeneous gaps in the kagome lattice Heisenberg antiferromagnets ZnCu<sub>3</sub>(OD)<sub>6</sub>FBr and ZnCu<sub>3</sub>(OD)<sub>6</sub>Cl<sub>2</sub>

ORAL · Invited

Abstract

The kagome Lattice Heisenberg Antiferromagnet (KLHA) formed from a corner-sharing triangular lattice of frustrated spins serves as one of the best candidates in the search for a quantum spin liquid ground state. Zn-barlowite (ZnCu3(OD)6FBr) and herbertsmithite (ZnCu3(OD)6Cl2) are two highly promising realizations of the KLHA and have been shown to remain paramagnetic even at ≈ 10-4J, where ≈ 190 K is the Cu-Cu super-exchange interaction energy. However, the reproducible contributions from interlayer defects obscure the intrinsic behavior, thus making theoretical predictions difficult to verify.  In this presentation, we will explain how 63Cu and 79Br nuclear quadrupole resonance and 19F nuclear magnetic resonance were used along with inverse Laplace transform T1 analysis to locally probe the quantum ground states of these kagome materials and elucidate the nature of their magnetic inhomogeneity. We present direct evidence for the gradual emergence of spin singlets with spatially varying excitation gaps and show that their fraction is limited to ~60% even at temperatures far below J.

Presenters

  • Jiaming Wang

    McMaster Univ

Authors

  • Jiaming Wang

    McMaster Univ

  • Weishi Yuan

    McMaster Univ

  • Philip M Singer

    Rice Univ

  • Rebecca Smaha

    Stanford Univ

  • Wei He

    Stanford Univ

  • Jiajia Wen

    Stanford Univ

  • Young S Lee

    Stanford Univ, Stanford University

  • Takashi Imai

    McMaster Univ