Quantum Spin Liquid: New State of Matter Explained

In summary, physicists have recently discovered a new state of matter known as a quantum spin liquid. This state occurs in Mott insulators at half filling and is characterized by having an emergent gauge theory with topological excitations and long range entanglement. It is formed by pairing nearby spins in spin singlets and has unpaired spin excitations called spinons. The mean field theory description uses Schwinger bosons to enforce single occupancy at all times and the emergent gauge theory accounts for this constraint. This state can also be seen as a result of the Gauss's law constraint in the resonating valence bond state.
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Kevin McHugh
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I just read an article stating physicists have discovered a new state of matter. What is a quantum spin liquid?
 
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You'll get better answers if you can link to what you read.
 
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A spin liquid is a spin state which breaks no symmetries down to zero temperature. Furthermore it has an emergent gauge theory with topological excitations and long range entanglement. It occurs in Mott insulators at half filling which are "frustrated" i.e. have competing interactions. The gauge theories are usually Z2 or U(1) but only the former is stable in two dimensions.

You can construct a SL from a resonating valence bond state with nearby spins (not always just nearest neighbors) paired in spin singlets (you have all of the possible dimer coverings.) You can construct a mean field theory description from the Heisenberg model using Schwinger bosons (or fermions but this is quite complicated). Excitations above the MF ground state are called spinons which are unpaired spins. In the SL phase they are "deconfined" and can separate as fractionalized excitations with spin =1/2 (this is actually quite similar to the idea of confinement in QCD).

In the MF construction you do not really have an order parameter since you have broken no symmetries. Instead you want to impose single occupancy at all times. Here is where the gauge theory comes in: since mean field theory just imposes the constraint on average, you must find a way to account for this. MF theory can give you states with two or no spins and you need to project out those states. You do this by identifying some emergent gauge field (it comes from a Lagrange multiplier in the Hamiltonian). So the spinons actually interact via this gauge field like charges (there are also monopole like excitations).

Another way to see this is that since you want only one bond coming from each site, you get a "Gauss's law" constraint from considering the RVB state and hence get an emergent gauge theory.

Quantum Field Theory of Many-Body Systems has a whole chapter on SLs.
 
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Related to Quantum Spin Liquid: New State of Matter Explained

1. What is a quantum spin liquid?

A quantum spin liquid is a state of matter in which the magnetic moments of the particles (spins) do not align and instead remain in a disordered and constantly fluctuating state, even at very low temperatures.

2. How is a quantum spin liquid different from other states of matter?

A quantum spin liquid is unique because it does not exhibit the usual magnetic ordering seen in most materials at low temperatures. In other words, the spins do not align to create a distinct magnetic field.

3. What are the potential applications of quantum spin liquids?

Quantum spin liquids have potential applications in quantum computing and data storage, as their constantly fluctuating spins can be used to store and process information in a more stable and efficient way compared to traditional methods.

4. How is a quantum spin liquid formed?

A quantum spin liquid can be formed in materials that have strongly interacting magnetic particles with a triangular or honeycomb lattice structure. These interactions prevent the spins from aligning and result in a disordered state.

5. Can quantum spin liquids be observed in real life?

Yes, quantum spin liquids have been observed in certain materials such as herbertsmithite, a mineral with a honeycomb lattice structure. However, they are still a relatively new and rare state of matter, and more research is needed to fully understand and harness their properties.

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