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Intrinsic Thermal Hall Effect in Mott Insulators

ORAL

Abstract

In light of recent experimental data indicating a substantial thermal Hall effect in square lattice antiferromagnetic Mott insulators, we investigate whether a simple Mott insulator can sustain a finite thermal Hall effect. We verify that the answer is ``no'' if one performs calculations within a spin-only low-energy effective spin model with non-interacting magnons. However, by performing determinant quantum Monte Carlo simulations, we show the single-band $t$-$t'$-$U$ Hubbard model coupled to an orbital magnetic field does support a finite thermal Hall effect when $t' \neq 0$ and $B \neq 0$ in the Mott insulating phase. We argue that the (carrier agnostic) necessary conditions for observing a finite thermal Hall effect are time-reversal and particle-hole symmetry breaking. By considering magnon-magnon scattering using a semi-classical Boltzmann analysis, we illustrate a physical mechanism by which finite transverse thermal conductivity may arise, consistent with our symmetry argument and numerical results. Our results contradict the conventional wisdom that square and triangular lattices with SU(2) symmetry do not support a finite thermal Hall effect and call for a critical re-examination of thermal Hall effect data in insulating magnets, as the magnon contribution should not be excluded a priori.

Publication: arXiv:2410.14863

Presenters

  • Emily Z Zhang

    Stanford University

Authors

  • Emily Z Zhang

    Stanford University

  • Jixun K Ding

    Stanford University, University of Pennsylvania

  • Wen O Wang

    Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics

  • Tessa Cookmeyer

    University of California, Santa Barbara

  • Brian Moritz

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

  • Yong-Baek Kim

    University of Toronto

  • Thomas P Devereaux

    Stanford University