4.6 Article

Master equation approach to computing RVB bond amplitudes

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 79, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.79.224431

Keywords

antiferromagnetism; bond lengths; frustration; ground states; Heisenberg model; magnetic moments; magnetic transitions; master equation; spin Hamiltonians; variational techniques; VB calculations; wave functions

Funding

  1. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation

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We describe a master equation analysis for the bond amplitudes h(r) of an RVB wave function. Starting from any initial guess, h(r) evolves-in a manner dictated by the spin Hamiltonian under consideration-toward a steady-state distribution representing an approximation to the true ground state. Unknown transition coefficients in the master equation are treated as variational parameters. We illustrate the method by applying it to the J(1)-J(2) antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model. Without frustration (J(2)=0), the amplitudes are radially symmetric and fall off as 1/r(3) in the bond length. As the frustration increases, there are precursor signs of columnar or plaquette valence bond solid order: the bonds preferentially align along the axes of the square lattice and weight accrues in the nearest-neighbor bond amplitudes. The Marshall sign rule holds over a large range of couplings, J(2)/J(1)less than or similar to 0.418. It fails when the r=(2,1) bond amplitude first goes negative, a point also marked by a cusp in the ground-state energy. A nonrigorous extrapolation of the staggered magnetic moment (through this point of nonanalyticity) shows it vanishing continuously at a critical value J(2)/J(1)approximate to 0.447. This may be preempted by a first-order transition to a state of broken translational symmetry.

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