Abstract
The spin-orbit generated Γ interaction is known to induce strong frustration and to be significant in realistic models of materials. To gain an understanding of the possible phases that can arise from this interaction, it is of considerable interest to focus on a limited part of parameter space in a quasi one-dimensional model where high precision numerical results can be obtained. Here we study the Heisenberg–Gamma ( JΓ ) ladder, determining the complete zero temperature phase diagram by analyzing the entanglement spectrum (ES) and energy susceptibility. A total of 11 different phases can be identified, among them the well known rung-singlet (RS) phase and 5 other phases, FM, FM-Z, FM-XY, AF and AF-Z, with conventional long-range magnetic order. The 3 ferromagnetic phases, FM, FM-Z and FM-XY simultaneously have non-zero scalar chirality. Two other phases, the antiferromagnetic Gamma (AΓ) and ferromagnetic Gamma (FΓ) phases, have previously been observed in the Kitaev–Gamma ladder, demonstrating that the AΓ-phase is a symmetry protected topological phase (SPT) protected by TR ×Rb symmetry, the product of time-reversal (TR) and π rotation around the b-axis ( Rb ), while the FΓ-phase is related to the RS phase through a local unitary transformation. The 3 remaining phases, ϒ, Ω and δ show no conventional order, a doubling of the ES and for the ϒ and Ω-phases a gap is clearly present. The δ-phase has a significantly smaller gap and displays incommensurate correlations, with a peak in the static structure factor, S(k) continuously shifting from k/π=2/3 to k=π . In the Ω-phase we find pronounced edge-states consistent with a SPT phase protected by the same TR ×Rb symmetry as the AΓ-phase. The precise nature of the ϒ and δ-phases is less clear.
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