APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session Q1: Gapless Spin Liquids
11:15 AM–1:39 PM,
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Room: Ballroom A1
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCMP
Chair: Claudio Castelnovo, University of Oxford
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.Q1.1
Abstract: Q1.00001 : Thermal-transport Studies of Quantum Spin Liquids
11:15 AM–11:51 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Minoru Yamashita
(Department of Physics, Kyoto University)
Quantum spins, coupling antiferromagnetically on a 2D
triangular lattice, cannot simultaneously satisfy all
interactions. This frustrated situation is expected to give
rise to mysterious fluid-like states of spins without long-
range order, so called quantum spin liquid (QSL). The ground
state of QSL and its exotic phenomena, such as fractionalized
excitation with an artificial gauge field, have been
extensively discussed for decades, yet to be identified by lack
of any real materials. This is why the recent discoveries of
materials possessing an ideal 2D triangular lattice have
spurred a great deal of interest. To understand the nature of
QSL, knowledge of the low-lying excitation, particularly the
presence/absence of an excitation gap, is of primary
importance. We employ thermal transport measurements on newly
discovered QSL candidates, $\kappa$-(BEDT-TTF)$_2$Cu$_2$(CN)$_3
$ and EtMe$_3$Sb[Pd(dmit)$_2$]$_2$, and report that the two
organic insulators possess different QSLs characterized by
different elementary excitations. In $\kappa$-(BEDT-TTF)$_2
$Cu$_2$(CN)$_3$ [1], heat transport is thermally activated in
low temperatures, suggesting presence of a spin gap in this
QSL. In stark contrast, in EtMe$_3$Sb[Pd(dmit)$_2$]$_2$ [2], a
sizable temperature-linear term of thermal conductivity is
clearly resolved in the zero-temperature limit, showing gapless
excitation with long mean free path ($\sim$1,000 lattice
distances), analogous to excitations near the Fermi surface in
normal metals. These results are consistent with theoretical
suggestions including 2D gapless spinons with a Fermi surface.
This work was done in collaboration with N. Nakata, Y. Senshu,
M. Nagata, Y. Kasahara, S. Fujimoto, T. Shibauchi, Y. Matsuda,
T. Sasaki, N. Yoneyama, N. Kobayashi, H. M. Yamamoto and R.
Kato.
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[1] M. Yamashita \textit{et al.}, Nature Physics \textbf{5}, 44-
47 (2009).
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[2] M. Yamashita \textit{et al.}, Science \textbf{328}, 1246
(2010).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.Q1.1