Frustration in magnetic interactions can give rise to disordered ground states with subtle and beautiful properties. The spin ices Ho2Ti2O7 and Dy2Ti2O7 exemplify this phenomenon, displaying a classical spinliquid state, with fractionalized magnetic-monopole excitations. Recently, there has been great interest in closely related "quantum spin-ice" materials, following the realization that anisotropic exchange interactions could convert spin ice into a massively entangled, quantum spin liquid, where magnetic monopoles become the charges of an emergent quantum electrodynamics. Here we show that even the simplest model of a quantum spin ice, the XXZ model on the pyrochlore lattice, can realize a still-richer scenario. Using a combination of classical Monte Carlo simulation, semiclassical molecular-dynamics simulation, and analytic field theory, we explore the properties of this model for frustrated transverse exchange.We find not one, but three competing forms of spin liquid, as well as a phase with hidden, spin-nematic order. We explore the experimental signatures of each of these different states, making explicit predictions for inelastic neutron scattering. These results show an intriguing similarity to experiments on a range of pyrochlore oxides.
CITATION STYLE
Taillefumier, M., Benton, O., Yan, H., Jaubert, L. D. C., & Shannon, N. (2017). Competing spin liquids and hidden spin-nematic order in spin ice with frustrated transverse exchange. Physical Review X, 7(4). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.7.041057
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