Higher-order topological quantum paramagnets
Daniel Gonz\'alez-Cuadra

TL;DR
This paper reveals how magnetic frustration in quantum paramagnets can lead to higher-order topological phases, characterized by unique boundary states and topological defects, expanding understanding of topological matter.
Contribution
It demonstrates that frustrated spin models can host higher-order topological quantum paramagnets, a novel phase with coexisting long-range order and non-trivial topology, identified via tensor network simulations.
Findings
Identification of higher-order topological phase in a frustrated Heisenberg model
Existence of corner-like states and topological defects in the phase
Potential realization of the phase in atomic quantum simulators
Abstract
Quantum paramagnets are strongly-correlated phases of matter where competing interactions frustrate magnetic order down to zero temperature. In certain cases, quantum fluctuations induce instead topological order, supporting, in particular, fractionalized quasi-particle excitations. In this work, we investigate paradigmatic spin models and show how magnetic frustration can also give rise to higher-order topological properties. We first study the frustrated Heisenberg model in a square lattice, where a plaquette valence bond solid appears through the spontaneous breaking of translational invariance. Despite the amount of effort that has been devoted to study this phase, its topological nature has so far been overlooked. By means of tensor network simulations, we establish how such state belongs to a higher-order symmetry-protected topological phase, where long-range plaquette order and…
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