Disorder-induced spin-liquid-like behavior in kagome-lattice compounds
Zhen Ma, Zhao-Yang Dong, Si Wu, Yinghao Zhu, Song Bao, Zhengwei Cai,, Wei Wang, Yanyan Shangguan, Jinghui Wang, Kejing Ran, Dehong Yu, Guochu Deng,, Richard A. Mole, Hai-Feng Li, Shun-Li Yu, Jian-Xin Li, and Jinsheng Wen

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that structural disorder in kagome-lattice compounds can induce spin-liquid-like behavior, with experimental evidence showing enhanced low-energy magnetic excitations in highly disordered samples, mimicking quantum spin liquids.
Contribution
It provides direct experimental evidence that disorder can induce spin-liquid-like features in kagome-lattice compounds, clarifying the relationship between disorder and quantum spin liquids.
Findings
Disorder enhances low-energy magnetic excitations.
Both compounds show gapless magnetic excitations with broad continua.
Disorder level correlates with excitation strength.
Abstract
Quantum spin liquids (QSLs) are an exotic state of matter that is subject to extensive research. However, the relationship between the ubiquitous disorder and the QSL behaviors is still unclear. Here, by performing comparative experimental studies on two kagom\'{e}-lattice QSL candidates, TmSbZnO and TmSbMgO, which are isostructural to each other but with strong and weak structural disorder, respectively, we show unambiguously that the disorder can induce spin-liquid-like features. In particular, both compounds show dominant antiferromagnetic interactions with a Curie-Weiss temperature of -17.4 and -28.7 K for TmSbZnO and TmSbMgO, respectively, but remain disordered down to about 0.05 K. Specific heat results suggest the presence of gapless magnetic excitations characterized by a residual linear term. Magnetic…
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