Critical Scaling of Entropy and Thermal Drude Weight in Anisotropic Heisenberg Antiferromagnets: A Thermodynamic Quest for Quantum Criticality

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Abstract

Up to now, probing the quantum phase transition (QPT) and quantum critical (QC) phenomena at finite temperatures in one-dimensional (1D) spin systems still lacks an in-depth understanding. Herein, we study the QPT and thermodynamics of 1D spin-1/2 anisotropic Heisenberg antiferromagnetic chains by Green’s function theory. The quantum phase diagram is renormalized by the anisotropy (∆), which manifests a quantum critical point (QCP) hc = 1 + ∆ signaling the transition from gapless Tomonaga–Luttinger liquid (TLL) to gapped ferromagnetic (FM) state, demonstrated by the magnetic entropy and thermal Drude weight. At low temperatures, it is shown that two crossover temperatures fan out a QC regime and capture the QCP via the linear extrapolation to zero temperature. In addition, around QCP, the QC scaling is performed by analyzing the entropy and thermal Drude weight to extract the critical exponents (α, δ, and β) that fulfill the Essamm–Fisher scaling law, which provides a novel thermodynamic means to detect QPT for experiment. Furthermore, scaling hypothesis equations with two rescaled manners are proposed to testify the scaling analysis, for which all the data points fall on a universal curve or two independent branches for the plot against rescaled field or temperature, implying the self-consistency and reliability of the obtained critical exponents.

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Ding, L. J., & Zhong, Y. (2022). Critical Scaling of Entropy and Thermal Drude Weight in Anisotropic Heisenberg Antiferromagnets: A Thermodynamic Quest for Quantum Criticality. Frontiers in Physics, 10. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphy.2022.843627

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