Clean models in CMP are those in which the interactions take on well defined values that are not complicated by the lattice geometry, chemical dilution, or random disorder effects. A growing field of study considers what happens to the physics of these clean models, in particular their ordered states, when the interactions are disordered (U(r1,r2) defined by a distribution) or compete with one another. In studying these complex Hamiltonians, one grapples with some of the most perplexing problems in CMP: spin glasses, where magnetic moments freeze out of equilibrium into random orientations; spin liquids, where the magnetic moments are fluctuating down to zero degrees Kelvin; the metal-insulator transition, where the competition between electron-electron interactions and disorder in the lattice compete and favor extended or localized electronic states, respectively; and spin-charge separation in superconductors.
My current research efforts, in collaboration with Michel Gingras, have focused on rare-earth pyrochlore magnets. Our emphasis has been on insulating systems, where the highly frustrated pyrochlore lattice (a network of corner sharing tetrahedra) acts in concert with the spin degrees of freedom and long-range dipole-dipole interactions to realize exotic magnetic phases like spin ice (residual entropy in the ground state) and spin liquid (dynamical fluctuations at T -> 0+). A battery of techniques are employed in these investigations: MC simulations, mean-field theory, random-phase approximation, high temperature series expansions, and summation methods to handle long-range dipolar interactions.
The rare-earth pyrochlores Ho2B2O7 and Dy2B2O7 (B=Ti,Sn) are called spin ices because from a statistical mechanics point of view they retain a similar residual (zero-point) entropy in their frozen state as hexagonal water ice (Ih). Hence, water ice and spin ice are systems frozen out of equilibrium. The pyrochlore material Tb2Ti2O7, which fails to order at temperatures as low as T = 70 mK, is a candidate spin liquid. Investigations of these materials focuses on unraveling the mysteries that exist in the paramagnetic (PM), spin disordered, regime. We are also looking at the subtle physics of the Heisenberg AF pyrochlore Gd2Ti2O7, which orders at T = 1 K and possibly experiences two transitions, and the complicated corner sharing triangular garnet material Gd3Ga5O12, which has a complex magnetic field versus temperature phase diagram with spin glass, spin liquid, and antiferromagnetic phases.
| In rare-earth pyrochlores, the rare-earth ions (e.g., Ho3+,Dy3+,Tb3+,Gd3+) sit on the vertices of the tetrahedra. Exchange and dipolar interactions are strong in these materials. Single-ion anisotropy is significant in some of these systems (e.g., the spin-ices). |
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The lattice of Gd3Ga5O12 (or GGG) consists of two interpenetrating sublattices of corner sharing triangles. The rare-earth ion Gd3+ sits on the vertices of this lattice. The single-ion anisotropy is negligible, but exchange and and dipolar interactions are strong. |
Earlier work on spin systems focused on bilayer magnets with frustration caused by lattice mismatch between layers and was done in collaboration with Richard Scalettar and Susan Kauzlarich. Using MC methods and mean-field techniques, we found that lattice off-set could induce collinear Ne'el states, canted phases, or orthogonal order between layers. This work was motivated by experimental evidence of orthogonal ordering in several mixed layer pnictide oxide materials (Sr2Mn3Pn2O2, Pn=As,Sb).
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The magnetic unit cell of Sr2Mn3Sb2O2.
The manganese ions Mn2+ (S=5/2) (red and blue circles) reside on two inequivalent square lattices. Neutron powder diffraction suggests a magnetic structure in which the moments in alternating layers order, antiferromagnetically, along orthogonal directions. |
To model disorder in a real material, calculations have to consider the average effect of disorder on the physics of your Hamiltonian. This means that calculations (numerical here) are very CPU intensive because an average over disorder realizations must be performed in addition to a thermal average (configuration average at T=0). We employed several techniques in our study: determinant quantum Monte Carlo (DQMC), constrained path quantum Monte Carlo (CPQMC), numerical Hartree-Fock, and exact diagonalization for small lattices. Among these, the CPQMC algorithm was crucial because it avoids the sign problem (see below) present in MC simulations of the site disordered model. We were successful in our efforts to study the effects of disorder on the magnetic correlations in the Hubbard model, finding that antiferromagnetic order is destroyed at a critical value of the disorder strength for each case considered. We also extended the limits of validity of the CPQMC algorithm to disordered lattice models. The effects of disorder on the charge correlations in the 2D Hubbard model are planned for the future.
| A schematic of bond disorder for fermions on a lattice. Singlets form along the strong bonds, magnetism is destroyed, but the local moments are preserved. |
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A schematic of site disorder for fermions on a lattice. Electrons pair on sites with deep potential wells. The loss of magnetic order is accompanied by the destruction of local moments. The electron wave function is localizes, an insulator. |
In addition, I am interested studying and applying sophisticated
classical MC methods (e.g., cluster or loop algorithms,
tempering and multi-canonical methods) to problems in frustrated
magnetism, spin glasses, water ice, and possibly biological systems.