Abstract

We theoretically discuss dynamical properties of spin-12 Heisenberg antiferromagnet on the triangular lattice in magnetic field H. We use the recently proposed bond-operator theory which operates with quantum states of the whole magnetic unit cell containing three spins. This technique describes accurately short-range spin correlations and provides a quantitative description of elementary excitations which appear in other approaches as bound states of conventional low-energy quasiparticles (e.g., magnons). In quantitative agreement with previous numerical and analytical findings, we observe four phases with coplanar spin arrangements upon the field increasing: the three-sublattice Y-phase, the collinear “up-up-down” (UUD) state, the non-collinear V-phase, and the collinear fully polarized (FP) state. We demonstrate that apart from magnons (spin-1 quasiparticles) there are spin-0 elementary excitations in the UUD state one of which is long lived and its spectrum lies below magnon branches. This mode originates from a high-energy quasiparticle at H=0 and it produces anomalies only in the longitudinal spin correlator because longitudinal and transverse channels are separated in collinear states. All other spin-0 excitations have finite lifetime and produce visibly anomalies in the dynamical structure factor. In the V-phase, we obtain multiple short-wavelength spin excitations which have no counterparts in the semiclassical spin-wave theory. Besides, we demonstrate a highly nontrivial field evolution of quasiparticles spectra on the way from one collinear state (UUD) to another one (FP) via the non-collinear V-phase (in which the longitudinal and the transverse channels are mixed). In particular, some parts of the spin-0 branch in the UUD state become parts of the spin-1 (magnon) branch in the FP phase whereas some parts of one magnon branch turn into parts of spin-2 branch. Such evolution would be very difficult to find by any conventional analytical approach. Our results are in good agreement with neutron experimental data obtained recently in Ba3CoSb2O9, KYbSe2, and CsYbSe2.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call