Disorder-Induced Quantum Spin Liquid in Spin Ice Pyrochlores
Author(s)
Balents, Leon; Savary, Lucile
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We propose that in a certain class of magnetic materials, known as non-Kramers “spin ice,” disorder induces quantum entanglement. Instead of driving glassy behavior, disorder provokes quantum superpositions of spins throughout the system and engenders an associated emergent gauge structure and set of fractional excitations. More precisely, disorder transforms a classical phase governed by a large entropy, classical spin ice, into a quantum spin liquid governed by entanglement. As the degree of disorder is increased, the system transitions between (i) a “regular” Coulombic spin liquid, (ii) a phase known as “Mott glass,” which contains rare gapless regions in real space, but whose behavior on long length scales is only modified quantitatively, and (iii) a true glassy phase for random distributions with large width or large mean amplitude.
Date issued
2017-02Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of PhysicsJournal
Physical Review Letters
Publisher
American Physical Society
Citation
Savary, Lucile, and Leon Balents. “Disorder-Induced Quantum Spin Liquid in Spin Ice Pyrochlores.” Physical Review Letters 118.8 (2017): n. pag. © 2017 American Physical Society
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0031-9007
1079-7114