Featureless quantum paramagnet with frustrated criticality and competing spiral magnetism on spin-1 honeycomb lattice magnet

ORAL

Abstract

We study the spin-1 honeycomb lattice magnets with frustrated exchange interactions. The proposed microscopic spin model contains first and second neighbor Heisenberg interactions as well as the singleion anisotropy. We establish a rich phase diagram that includes a featureless quantum paramagnet(QP) and various spin spiral states induced by the mechanism of order by quantum disorder. Although the QP is dubbed featureless, it is shown that the magnetic excitations develop a contour degeneracy in the reciprocal space at the band minima. These degenerate excitations are responsible for the frustrated criticality from the quantum paramagnet to ordered phases. This work illustrates the effects of magnetic frustration on both magnetic orderings and the magnetic excitations. We discuss the experimental relevance to various Ni-based honeycomb lattice magnets.

*Research funds from
the Ministry of Science and Technology of China with Grants No. 2018YFE0103200, No. 2016YFA0300500, No. 2016YFA0301001, Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project with Grant No. 2019SHZDZX04,
the Research Grants Council of Hong Kong with General Research Fund Grants No. 17303819, No. 17306520
Z.W. is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Basic Energy Sciences Grant No. DE-FG02- 99ER45747.

Presenters

  • Jianqiao Liu

    • Peking University
    • Peking Univ

Authors

  • Jianqiao Liu

    • Peking University
    • Peking Univ
  • Fei-Ye Li

    • Department of Physics and HKU-UCAS Joint Institute for Theoretical and Computational Physics at Hong Kong, The university of Hong Kong
  • Gang Chen

    • The University of Hong Kong
    • Department of Physics and HKU-UCAS Joint Institute for Theoretical and Computational Physics at Hong Kong, The university of Hong Kong
  • Ziqiang Wang

    • Boston University
    • Physics, Boston College
    • Boston College
    • Department of Physics, Boston College