Abstract

Lieb-Schultz-Mattis (LSM) theorems provide powerful constraints on the problem, i.e. whether a quantum phase or phase transition can emerge in a many-body system. We derive the topological partition functions that characterize the LSM constraints in spin systems with G_s\times G_{int}Gs×Gint symmetry, where G_sGs is an arbitrary space group in one or two spatial dimensions, and G_{int}Gint is any internal symmetry whose projective representations are classified by \mathbb{Z}_2^kℤ2k with kk an integer. We then apply these results to study the emergibility of a class of exotic quantum critical states, including the well-known deconfined quantum critical point (DQCP), U(1)U(1) Dirac spin liquid (DSL), and the recently proposed non-Lagrangian Stiefel liquid. These states can emerge as a consequence of the competition between a magnetic state and a non-magnetic state. We identify all possible realizations of these states on systems with SO(3)\times \mathbb{Z}_2^TSO(3)×ℤ2T internal symmetry and either p6mp6m or p4mp4m lattice symmetry. Many interesting examples are discovered, including a DQCP adjacent to a ferromagnet, stable DSLs on square and honeycomb lattices, and a class of quantum critical spin-quadrupolar liquids of which the most relevant spinful fluctuations carry spin-22. In particular, there is a realization of spin-quadrupolar DSL that is beyond the usual parton construction. We further use our formalism to analyze the stability of these states under symmetry-breaking perturbations, such as spin-orbit coupling. As a concrete example, we find that a DSL can be stable in a recently proposed candidate material, NaYbO_22.

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