Quantum Monte Carlo studies of spinons in one-dimensional spin systems
Ying Tang, Anders W. Sandvik

TL;DR
This paper uses valence-bond quantum Monte Carlo simulations to study spinon excitations in one-dimensional quantum spin systems, revealing how confinement and deconfinement depend on system parameters and phases.
Contribution
It characterizes spinon sizes and confinement lengths across various 1D models, providing new insights into their behavior in different quantum phases.
Findings
Spinons have finite size in valence-bond-solid states.
Spinons are deconfined in uniform chains but confined with dimerization or ladder formation.
The length scales can be tuned from small to infinite by changing model parameters.
Abstract
Observing constituent particles with fractional quantum numbers in confined and deconfined states is an interesting and challenging problem in quantum many-body physics. Here we further explore a computational scheme [Y. Tang and A. W. Sandvik, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 107}, 157201 (2011)] based on valence-bond quantum Monte Carlo simulations of quantum spin systems. Using several different one-dimensional models, we characterize spinon excitations using the spinon size and confinement length (the size of a bound state). The spinons have finite size in valence-bond-solid states, infinite size in the critical region, and become ill-defined in the N\'eel state. We also verify that pairs of spinons are deconfined in these uniform spin chains but become confined upon introducing a pattern of alternating coupling strengths (dimerization) or coupling two chains (forming a ladder). In the…
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