Spin Fluctuation Theory for Quantum Tricritical Point Arising in Proximity to First-Order Phase Transitions: Applications to Heavy-Fermion Systems, YbRh2Si2, CeRu2Si2, and beta-YbAlB4
Takahiro Misawa, Youhei Yamaji, Masatoshi Imada

TL;DR
This paper develops a phenomenological spin fluctuation theory for antiferromagnetic quantum tricritical points, explaining experimental observations in heavy-fermion systems and predicting distinctive temperature dependencies of magnetic fluctuations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel spin fluctuation framework for quantum tricriticality that accounts for experimental puzzles in heavy-fermion compounds without relying on Kondo physics.
Findings
Reproduces experimental ferromagnetic susceptibility and magnetization in YbRh2Si2
Predicts T^{-3/2} and T^{-3/4} temperature dependencies of magnetic fluctuations
Suggests quantum tricriticality as a possible origin of anomalous susceptibility in CeRu2Si2 and beta-YbAlB4
Abstract
We propose a phenomenological spin fluctuation theory for antiferromagnetic quantum tricritical point (QTCP), where the first-order phase transition changes into the continuous one at zero temperature. Under magnetic fields, ferromagnetic quantum critical fluctuations develop around the antiferromagnetic QTCP in addition to antiferromagnetic ones, which is in sharp contrast with the conventional antiferromagnetic quantum critical point. For itinerant electron systems,} we show that the temperature dependence of critical magnetic fluctuations around the QTCP are given as chiQ \propto T^{-3/2} (chi0\propto T^{-3/4}) at the antiferromagnetic ordering (ferromagnetic) wave number q=Q (q=0). The convex temperature dependence of chi0^{-1} is the characteristic feature of the QTCP, which is never seen in the conventional spin fluctuation theory. We propose that the general theory of quantum…
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