Abstract
Some measurements have shown that the second-order exchange interaction is non-negligible in ferromagnetic compounds whose microscopic interactions are described by means of half-odd integer quantum spins. In these spin systems the ground state is either ferromagnetic or antiferromagnetic when the bilinear exchange interaction is dominant. Instead, in ferromagnetic systems characterized by bilinear and biquadratic exchange interactions of comparable magnitude, the energy minimum occurs when spins are in a canting ground-state. To this aim, a one-dimensional (1D) quantum spin chain and a two-dimensional (2D) lattice of quantum spins subjected to periodic boundary conditions are modeled via the generalized quantum Heisenberg Hamiltonian containing, in addition to the isotropic and short-range bilinear exchange interaction of the Heisenberg type, a second-order interaction, the isotropic and short-range biquadratic exchange interaction between nearest-neighbors quantum spins. For these 1D and 2D quantum systems a generalization of the Mermin–Wagner–Hohenberg theorem (also known as Mermin–Wagner–Berezinksii or Coleman theorem) is given. It is demonstrated, by means of quantum statistical arguments, based on Bogoliubov’s inequality, that, at any finite temperature, (1) there is absence of long-range order and that (2) the law governing the vanishing of the order parameter is the same as in the bilinear case for both 1D and 2D quantum ferromagnetic systems. The physical implications of the absence of a spontaneous spin symmetry breaking in 1D spin chains and 2D spin lattices modeled via a generalized quantum Heisenberg Hamiltonian are discussed.
Subject
Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous),General Mathematics,Chemistry (miscellaneous),Computer Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
6 articles.
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