Author:
Rausch Roman,Peschke Matthias,Plorin Cassian,Karrasch Christoph
Abstract
We compute ground-state properties of the isotropic,
antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model on the sodalite cage geometry. This
is a 60-spin spherical molecule with 24 vertex-sharing tetrahedra which
can be regarded as a molecular analogue of a capped kagome lattice and
which has been synthesized with high-spin rare-earth atoms. Here, we
focus on the S=1/2S=1/2
case where quantum effects are strongest. We employ the SU(2)-symmetric
density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG). We find a threefold
degenerate ground state that breaks the spatial symmetry and that splits
up the molecule into three large parts which are almost decoupled from
each other. This stands in sharp contrast to the behaviour of most known
spherical molecules. On a methodological level, the disconnection leads
to ``glassy dynamics’’ within the DMRG that cannot be targeted via
standard techniques. In the presence of finite magnetic fields, we find
broad magnetization plateaus at 4/5, 3/5, and 1/5 of the saturation,
which one can understand in terms of localized magnons, singlets, and
doublets which are again nearly decoupled from each other. At the
saturation field, the zero-point entropy is
S=\ln(182)\approx 5.2S=ln(182)≈5.2
in units of the Boltzmann constant.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy
Cited by
3 articles.
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