Discontinuous quantum and classical magnetic response of the pentakis dodecahedron
N. P. Konstantinidis

TL;DR
This paper investigates the complex magnetic responses of the pentakis dodecahedron, revealing multiple discontinuities in magnetization and susceptibility due to frustration and exchange interactions, across classical and quantum models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of magnetic discontinuities in the pentakis dodecahedron, highlighting the maximum number of such discontinuities in classical and quantum regimes.
Findings
Maximum of 10 magnetization and 1 susceptibility discontinuities classically.
Up to 3 quantum magnetization jumps with z=2, and a z=3 discontinuity.
Frustration induces nonmagnetic states within the singlet-triplet gap.
Abstract
The pentakis dodecahedron, the dual of the truncated icosahedron, consists of 60 edge-sharing triangles. It has 20 six- and 12 five-fold coordinated vertices, with the former forming a dodecahedron, and each of the latter connected to the vertices of one of the 12 pentagons of the dodecahedron. When spins mounted on the vertices of the pentakis dodecahedron interact according to the nearest-neighbor antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model, the two different vertex types necessitate the introduction of two exchange constants. As the relative strength of the two constants is varied the molecule interpolates between the dodecahedron and a molecule consisting only of quadrangles. The competition between the two exchange constants, frustration, and an external magnetic field results in a multitude of ground-state magnetization and susceptibility discontinuities. At the classical level the maximum…
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