Magnetic field induced phenomena in Kitaev spin liquids
Shi Feng, Nandini Trivedi

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in understanding magnetic field effects on Kitaev quantum spin liquids, focusing on how fractionalized particles like Majorana fermions and Z2 fluxes can be experimentally identified and distinguished.
Contribution
It synthesizes current knowledge on field-induced phenomena in Kitaev spin liquids, emphasizing experimental signatures of fractionalized quasiparticles across various emergent phases.
Findings
Identification of conditions for isolating specific fractionalized quasiparticles
Connection of dynamical phenomena to experimental observables like neutron scattering
Clarification of the scope of spin liquid phases under magnetic fields
Abstract
Quantum spin liquids (QSLs) host a variety of fractionalized particles. In Kitaev's paradigmatic honeycomb model a spin- fractionalizes into flux due to emergent gauge field and matter Majorana fermions. Although these excitations have well-defined dynamics in the integrable limit, their direct experimental identification is notoriously challenging: realistic materials inevitably host additional symmetry-allowed interactions that break integrability and hybridize gauge and matter sectors, while magnetic fields, which are often required to suppress competing order and stabilize a putative QSL regime, further entangle the responses of different fractionalized quasiparticles and may even drive the system into field-induced spin-liquid phases that are not adiabatically connected to the integrable limit. A prominent example is the quantum Majorana metal, in which…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Condensed Matter Physics · Topological Materials and Phenomena · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism
