4.6 Article

Wave function and spatial structure of polarons in an antiferromagnetic bilayer

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 108, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.108.075141

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A nonperturbative scheme for calculating the wave function of magnetic polarons in a bilayer antiferromagnet is developed, providing insights into their spatial properties and dressing cloud structure.
Adding a dopant to an antiferromagnetic spin background disturbs the magnetic order and leads to the formation of a quasiparticle coined the magnetic polaron, which plays a central role in understanding strongly correlated materials. Recently, remarkably detailed insights into the spatial properties of such polarons have been obtained using atoms in optical lattices. Motivated by this we develop a nonperturbative scheme for calculating the wave function of the magnetic polaron in a bilayer antiferromagnet using the self-consistent Born approximation. The scheme includes an infinite number of spin waves, which is crucial for an accurate description of the most interesting regime of strong correlations. Utilizing the developed wave function, we explore the spatial structure of the polaron dressing cloud consisting of magnetically frustrated spins surrounding the hole. Mimicking the nonmonotonic behavior of the antiferromagnetic order, we find that the dressing cloud first decreases and then increases in size with increasing interlayer hopping. The increase reflects the decrease in the magnetic order as a quantum phase transition to a disordered state is approached for large interlayer hopping. We, furthermore, find that the symmetry of the ground state dressing cloud changes as the interlayer coupling increases. Our results should be experimentally accessible using quantum simulation with optical lattices.

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