Spherically symmetric approaches in the theoretical study of low-dimensional magnets
Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 16:24 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A spherically symmetric self-consistent approach studies low-dimensional Heisenberg spin models while respecting the Mermin-Wagner and Marshall theorems along with the site spin constraint.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The spherically symmetric self-consistent approach makes it possible to study low-dimensional Heisenberg-type spin models, including frustrated ones, with careful consideration of the theoretic (Mermin-Wagner and Marshall) theorems, as well as the site spin constraint. Thus, the difficulties that may arise in the traditional analysis of low-dimensional magnetic systems are avoided. The approach can also be applied to the spin-pseudospin model, and is also embedded in more complex constructions when considering spin models with free carriers, such as the basic and three-band Hubbard models, t-J and s-d models, and the Kondo lattice.
What carries the argument
The spherically symmetric self-consistent approach, which enforces spherical symmetry together with the site spin constraint inside a self-consistent loop to respect the Mermin-Wagner and Marshall theorems.
If this is right
- The method permits systematic study of frustrated low-dimensional spin systems while remaining consistent with the Mermin-Wagner and Marshall theorems.
- The same self-consistent construction applies directly to spin-pseudospin models.
- The approach embeds into treatments of models that contain both localized spins and mobile carriers, including the Hubbard, t-J, s-d, and Kondo-lattice Hamiltonians.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The framework may supply a practical route to finite-temperature properties of two-dimensional antiferromagnets where quantum fluctuations destroy order.
- Because the method respects the site spin constraint exactly, it could be combined with cluster extensions to improve descriptions of short-range correlations.
- Extensions to doped systems may clarify how carrier motion modifies the spin background while still obeying the underlying theorems.
Load-bearing premise
Enforcing spherical symmetry together with the site spin constraint inside a self-consistent scheme yields physically accurate ground-state and excitation properties without introducing uncontrolled approximations that invalidate the theorems.
What would settle it
A direct numerical comparison in which the method's computed ground-state energy, spin correlations, or excitation spectrum for a concrete two-dimensional frustrated Heisenberg model deviates significantly from exact diagonalization on small clusters or from quantum Monte Carlo results on larger lattices.
Figures
read the original abstract
The main ideas and some of the most important results of the spherically symmetric self-consistent approach and a number of related theoretical algorithms are presented. These methods make it possible to study low-dimensional Heisenberg-type spin models, including frustrated ones, with careful consideration of the theoretic (Mermin-Wagner and Marshall) theorems, as well as the site spin constraint. Thus, the difficulties that may arise in the traditional analysis of low-dimensional magnetic systems are avoided. The approach can also be applied to the spin-pseudospin model, and is also embedded in more complex constructions when considering spin models with free carriers, such as the basic and three-band Hubbard models, t-J and s-d models, and the Kondo lattice.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript presents the main ideas, algorithms, and selected results of the spherically symmetric self-consistent approach (and related methods) for low-dimensional Heisenberg-type spin models, including frustrated cases. It asserts that the framework incorporates the Mermin-Wagner theorem, Marshall theorem, and site spin constraint, thereby avoiding common difficulties of traditional analyses. Extensions to spin-pseudospin models and to Hubbard-like models with free carriers (basic and three-band Hubbard, t-J, s-d, Kondo lattice) are also outlined.
Significance. If the self-consistent scheme demonstrably respects the cited theorems and constraint while remaining computationally tractable, the approach would constitute a useful addition to the toolkit for frustrated low-dimensional magnets, where conventional spin-wave or mean-field treatments often violate Mermin-Wagner or Marshall constraints. The paper's emphasis on explicit enforcement of these constraints is a positive feature.
major comments (2)
- [§3] §3 (or equivalent section describing the self-consistency loop): the manuscript states that the spherical-symmetry ansatz together with the site spin constraint automatically satisfies the Mermin-Wagner theorem, yet no explicit derivation is supplied showing that the staggered magnetization vanishes at finite temperature in 1D/2D. An equation or numerical check demonstrating this property is required to substantiate the central claim.
- [Results] Results section (e.g., figures or tables reporting ground-state energies or correlation functions): for the frustrated models discussed, the paper should compare the spherically symmetric results against exact diagonalization or DMRG benchmarks on the same clusters to quantify the uncontrolled approximation introduced by the spherical averaging.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract/Introduction] The abstract and introduction use the phrase 'careful consideration' of the theorems without defining the precise manner in which each constraint is enforced; a short table or bullet list mapping each theorem to the corresponding equation or constraint in the formalism would improve clarity.
- [Method] Notation for the self-consistent parameters (e.g., Lagrange multipliers or decoupling parameters) is introduced without a consolidated list; adding a nomenclature table would aid readers unfamiliar with the method.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the positive evaluation of the manuscript and the constructive comments. We address each major point below and indicate the corresponding revisions.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [§3] §3 (or equivalent section describing the self-consistency loop): the manuscript states that the spherical-symmetry ansatz together with the site spin constraint automatically satisfies the Mermin-Wagner theorem, yet no explicit derivation is supplied showing that the staggered magnetization vanishes at finite temperature in 1D/2D. An equation or numerical check demonstrating this property is required to substantiate the central claim.
Authors: We agree that an explicit derivation would strengthen the presentation of this key property. In the revised manuscript we will insert a concise derivation (or short appendix) showing that the spherical-symmetry ansatz together with the local spin constraint forces the staggered magnetization to vanish identically at any finite temperature on 1D and 2D lattices. The argument follows directly from the self-consistency equations for the two-point spin correlators and the absence of long-range order permitted by the Mermin-Wagner theorem. revision: yes
-
Referee: [Results] Results section (e.g., figures or tables reporting ground-state energies or correlation functions): for the frustrated models discussed, the paper should compare the spherically symmetric results against exact diagonalization or DMRG benchmarks on the same clusters to quantify the uncontrolled approximation introduced by the spherical averaging.
Authors: We accept that direct numerical benchmarks help quantify the accuracy of the spherical averaging. The present manuscript is a review of the methodological framework; the specific numerical comparisons with exact diagonalization and DMRG for the frustrated Heisenberg models have already been reported in our earlier works. In the revision we will add a short summary paragraph (with a new table) that collects the existing benchmark data on small clusters, thereby making the magnitude of the approximation explicit while keeping the focus on the theoretical aspects. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No significant circularity: derivation remains self-contained against external theorems
full rationale
The paper presents the spherically symmetric self-consistent approach as a method for analyzing low-dimensional Heisenberg models while explicitly incorporating the Mermin-Wagner theorem, Marshall theorem, and site spin constraint. No load-bearing derivation step is shown to reduce by construction to a fitted parameter, self-citation chain, or renamed input; the central claim rests on the algorithmic enforcement of spherical symmetry and constraints rather than on any internal redefinition or prediction that is statistically forced. The approach is described as applicable to multiple models (Hubbard, t-J, etc.) with the theorems treated as external inputs that the method respects, yielding a self-contained framework without the enumerated circularity patterns.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Lean theorems connected to this paper
-
IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/AlexanderDuality.leanalexander_duality_circle_linking unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
The RGM belongs to the first approach... the state of the magnetic system... is singlet, all sites are equivalent, the average spin at a site is zero ⟨S_i⟩=0, and the spin order is described by spin-spin correlators. Thus, in the RGM, neither spin nor lattice symmetry is broken.
-
IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/AbsoluteFloorClosure.leanabsolute_floor_iff_bare_distinguishability unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
the spherically symmetric self-consistent approach... with careful consideration of the theoretic (Mermin-Wagner and Marshall) theorems, as well as the site spin constraint
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
J. Kondo and K. Yamaji. Green’s-function formalism of the one-dimensional Heisen- berg spin system. Prog. Theor. Phys., 47(3):807–818, January 1972
work page 1972
-
[2]
S. V. Tyablikov. Metody kvantovoi teorii magnetizma [Methods in the Quantum Theory of Magnetism]. Moscow: Nauka, 2nd ed., 1975. REFERENCES41
work page 1975
-
[3]
Herbert B. Callen. Green Function Theory of Ferromagnetism. Phys. Rev., 130(3):890–898, May 1963
work page 1963
-
[4]
H. Shimahara and S. Takada. Green’s function theory of the two-dimensional Heisen- berg model-spin wave in short range order. J. Phys. Soc. Jpn., 60(7):2394–2405, 1991
work page 1991
-
[5]
A. F. Barabanov and O. A. Starykh. Spherical Symmetric Spin Wave Theory of Heisenberg Model. J. Phys. Soc. Jpn., 61(2):704–708, February 1992
work page 1992
-
[6]
A. F. Barabanov and V. M. Beresovsky. On the theory of the two-dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnet with frustration on a square lattice. J. Phys. Soc. Jpn., 63(11):3974–3982, 1994
work page 1994
-
[7]
A. F. Barabanov and V. M. Berezovskii. Phase transitions of the second kind in the spherically symmetric theory of a 2D Heisenberg frustrated antiferromagnet. J. Exp. Theor. Phys., 79:627, 1994
work page 1994
-
[8]
M. H¨ artel, J. Richter, D. Ihle, and S.-L. Drechsler. Thermodynamics of a one- dimensional frustrated spin-1/2 Heisenberg ferromagnet.Phys. Rev. B, 78(17):174412, 2008
work page 2008
-
[9]
Thermodynamics of the frustrated ferromagnetic spin-1/2 heisenberg chain
J Richter, M H¨ artel, D Ihle, and S-L Drechsler. Thermodynamics of the frustrated ferromagnetic spin-1/2 heisenberg chain. J. Phys. Conf. Ser., 145(1):012064, jan 2009
work page 2009
-
[10]
M. H¨ artel, J. Richter, D. Ihle, J. Schnack, and S.-L. Drechsler. Thermodynamics of the one-dimensional frustrated Heisenberg ferromagnet with arbitrary spin. Phys. Rev. B, 84(10):104411, 2011
work page 2011
- [11]
- [12]
-
[13]
D. Schmalfuß, J. Richter, and D. Ihle. Green’s function theory of quasi-two- dimensional spin-half Heisenberg ferromagnets: Stacked square versus stacked kagome lattices. Phys. Rev. B, 72(22):224405, December 2005
work page 2005
-
[14]
D. Schmalfuß, R. Darradi, J. Richter, J. Schulenburg, and D. Ihle. Quantum𝐽 1 −𝐽 2 Antiferromagnet on a Stacked Square Lattice: Influence of the Interlayer Coupling on the Ground-State Magnetic Ordering. Phys. Rev. Lett., 97(15):157201, October 2006
work page 2006
-
[15]
N. A. Kozlov and A. F. Barabanov. On the theory of spin susceptibility of yttrium cuprates in the two-plane model of a frustrated antiferromagnet. JETP Lett., 85:544, 2007
work page 2007
-
[16]
N. D. Mermin and H. Wagner. Absence of Ferromagnetism or Antiferromagnetism in One- or Two-Dimensional Isotropic Heisenberg Models.Phys. Rev. Lett., 17(22):1133– 1136, November 1966. REFERENCES42
work page 1966
-
[17]
Marshall and Rudolf Ernst Peierls
W. Marshall and Rudolf Ernst Peierls. Antiferromagnetism. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. Ser. A, 232(1188):48–68, January 1997
work page 1997
-
[18]
Oleg A. Starykh. Unusual ordered phases of highly frustrated magnets: a review. Rep. Prog. Phys., 78(5):052502, April 2015
work page 2015
-
[19]
Yi Zhou, Kazushi Kanoda, and Tai-Kai Ng. Quantum spin liquid states. Rev. Mod. Phys., 89(2):025003, April 2017
work page 2017
-
[20]
M. M. Markina, P. S. Berdonosov, V. A. Dolgikh, K. V. Zakharov, E. S. Kuznetsova, and A. N. Vasiliev. Francisites as new geometrically frustrated quasi-two-dimensional magnets. Phys. Usp., 64(4):344, 2021
work page 2021
-
[21]
P. Rubin and A. Sherman. Magnetic properties of the two-dimensional Heisenberg model on a triangular lattice. Phys. Lett. A, 334(4):312–316, January 2005
work page 2005
- [22]
-
[23]
T. N. Antsygina, M. I. Poltavskaya, I. I. Poltavsky, and K. A. Chishko. Thermody- namics of low-dimensional spin-1/2 Heisenberg ferromagnets in an external magnetic field within a Green function formalism. Phys. Rev. B, 77(2):024407, 2008
work page 2008
- [24]
- [25]
-
[26]
P. Rubin and A. Sherman. The spin-1𝐽 1 −𝐽 3 heisenberg model on a triangular lattice. J. Phys. Conf. Ser., 833(1):012019, apr 2017
work page 2017
-
[27]
Spin-liquid state for two-dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnets on a kagome lattice
Weiqiang Yu and Shiping Feng. Spin-liquid state for two-dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnets on a kagome lattice. Eur. Phys. J. B, 13(2):265–269, January 2000
work page 2000
-
[28]
B. H. Bernhard, B. Canals, and C. Lacroix. Green’s function approach to the magnetic properties of the kagome antiferromagnet. Phys. Rev. B, 66(10):104424, September 2002
work page 2002
- [29]
-
[30]
Vladimirov, Dieter Ihle, and Nikolay M
Artem A. Vladimirov, Dieter Ihle, and Nikolay M. Plakida. Spin excitations and thermodynamics of the antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model on the layered honeycomb lattice. Eur. Phys. J. B, 90(3):48, March 2017
work page 2017
-
[31]
Vladimirov, Dieter Ihle, and Nikolay M
Artem A. Vladimirov, Dieter Ihle, and Nikolay M. Plakida. Spin excitations and thermodynamics of the𝑡−𝐽model on the honeycomb lattice. Eur. Phys. J. B, 91(8):195, August 2018. REFERENCES43
work page 2018
-
[32]
Thermodynamics of the pyrochlore Heisenberg ferromagnet with arbitrary spin S
Patrick M¨ uller, Andre Lohmann, Johannes Richter, Oleg Menchyshyn, and Oleg Derzhko. Thermodynamics of the pyrochlore Heisenberg ferromagnet with arbitrary spin S. Phys. Rev. B, 96(17):174419, November 2017
work page 2017
-
[33]
Thermody- namics of the pyrochlore-lattice quantum Heisenberg antiferromagnet
Patrick Muller, Andre Lohmann, Johannes Richter, and Oleg Derzhko. Thermody- namics of the pyrochlore-lattice quantum Heisenberg antiferromagnet. Phys. Rev. B, 100(2):024424, July 2019
work page 2019
- [34]
- [35]
- [36]
-
[37]
Assa Auerbach and Daniel P. Arovas. Schwinger Bosons Approaches to Quantum Antiferromagnetism, pages 365–377. Berlin, Heidelberg, 2011
work page 2011
-
[38]
S. Sachdev. Quantum phase transitions. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, second edition, 2011
work page 2011
-
[39]
I. E. Dzialoshinskii. Thermodynamic theory of ”weak” ferromagnetism in antiferro- magnetic substances. Sov. Phys. JETP, 5:1259, 1957
work page 1957
-
[40]
I. E. Dzyaloshinsky. A thermodynamic theory of “weak” ferromagnetism of antifer- romagnetics. J. Phys. Chem. Solids, 4(4):241–255, January 1958
work page 1958
-
[41]
New Mechanism of Anisotropic Superexchange Interaction
Toru Moriya. New Mechanism of Anisotropic Superexchange Interaction. Phys. Rev. Lett., 4(5):228–230, March 1960
work page 1960
-
[42]
Anisotropic Superexchange Interaction and Weak Ferromagnetism
Toru Moriya. Anisotropic Superexchange Interaction and Weak Ferromagnetism. Phys. Rev., 120(1):91–98, October 1960
work page 1960
-
[43]
A. B. Borisov. Localized structures in magnetic systems without an inversion center. Phys. Usp., 63(3):269, 2020
work page 2020
-
[44]
J. M. Luttinger and L. Tisza. Theory of Dipole Interaction in Crystals. Phys. Rev., 70(11-12):954–964, December 1946
work page 1946
-
[45]
H. T. Diep, editor. Frustrated Spin Systems. World Scientific, Singapore, 2-nd edition, 2013
work page 2013
-
[46]
Michael M. Wolf, Frank Verstraete, and J. Ignacio Cirac. Entanglement and frustra- tion in ordered systems. Int. J. Quantum Inf., 01(04):465–477, December 2003
work page 2003
- [47]
- [48]
-
[49]
D. N. Zubarev. Double-time Green functions in statistical physics. Sov. Phys. Usp., 3:320, 1960
work page 1960
-
[50]
A. F. Barabanov, A. V. Mikheyenkov, and A. V. Shvartsberg. Frustrated𝐽 1 −𝐽 2 −𝐽 3 quantum two-dimensional antiferromagnet in the spherically symmetric self-consistent approach. Theor. Math. Phys., 168:1192, 2011
work page 2011
-
[51]
Quantum spin liquids: a review
Lucile Savary and Leon Balents. Quantum spin liquids: a review. Rep. Prog. Phys., 80(1):016502, November 2016
work page 2016
-
[52]
Efstratios Manousakis. The spin-1/2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet on a square lattice and its application to the cuprous oxides. Rev. Mod. Phys., 63(1):1–62, January 1991
work page 1991
-
[53]
L. Siurakshina, D. Ihle, and R. Hayn. Magnetic order and finite-temperature proper- ties of the two-dimensional frustrated heisenberg model. Phys. Rev. B, 64(10):104406, 2001
work page 2001
-
[54]
A. V. Mikheyenkov, A. F. Barabanov, and N. A. Kozlov. Self-consistent spin suscep- tibility in 2D frustrated antiferromagnet. Phys. Lett. A, 354(4):320–324, 2006
work page 2006
-
[55]
A. F. Barabanov, A. V. Mikheyenkov, and A. M. Belemuk. Renormalized spin sus- ceptibility in layered frustrated antiferromagnet related to cuprates. Phys. Lett. A, 365(5–6):469–472, 2007
work page 2007
-
[56]
A. V. Mikheyenkov, N. A. Kozlov, and A. F. Barabanov. On the damping in the two-dimensional frustrated heisenberg model. Phys. Lett. A, 373(6):693–697, 2009
work page 2009
-
[57]
M. H¨ artel, J. Richter, D. Ihle, and S.-L. Drechsler. Thermodynamics of a two- dimensional frustrated spin-1/2 Heisenberg ferromagnet.Phys. Rev. B, 81(17):174421, 2010
work page 2010
-
[58]
M. H¨ artel, J. Richter, O. G¨ otze, D. Ihle, and S.-L. Drechsler. Thermodynamics of the two-dimensional frustrated𝐽 1 −𝐽 2 Heisenberg ferromagnet in the collinear stripe regime: Susceptibility and correlation length. Phys. Rev. B, 87(5):054412, 2013
work page 2013
-
[59]
A. V. Mikheyenkov, A. V. Shvartsberg, and A. F. Barabanov. Phase transitions in the two-dimensional𝐽 1-𝐽2 Heisenberg model with arbitrary signs of exchange interactions. JETP Lett., 98:178, 2013
work page 2013
-
[60]
A. V. Mikheyenkov, V. E. Valiulin, A. V. Shvartsberg, and A. F. Barabanov. Spin- spin correlation length in a 2D frustrated magnet and its relation to doping. J. Exp. Theor. Phys., 148:514, 2015
work page 2015
-
[61]
A. F. Barabanov, A. V. Mikheyenkov, and N. A. Kozlov. Quantum phase transition in a two-dimensional frustrated magnet in the matrix projection approach. JETP Lett., 102:333, 2015
work page 2015
-
[62]
A. V. Mikheyenkov, A. V. Shvartsberg, V. E. Valiulin, and A. F. Barabanov. Ther- modynamic properties of the 2d frustrated Heisenberg model for the entire circle. J. Magn. Magn. Mater., 419:131–139, December 2016. REFERENCES45
work page 2016
-
[63]
J. Richter, J. Schulenburg, and A. Honecker. Quantum magnetism in two dimensions: From semi-classical Neel order to magnetic disorder. In Ulrich Schollw¨ ock, Johannes Richter, Damian J. J. Farnell, and Raymod F. Bishop, editors, Quantum Magnetism, number 645 in Lecture Notes in Physics, pages 85–153. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, January 2004
work page 2004
-
[64]
P. Fr¨ obrich and P. J. Kuntz. Many-body Green’s function theory of Heisenberg films. Phys. Rep., 432(5):223–304, October 2006
work page 2006
-
[65]
S. Feldkemper, W. Weber, J. Schulenburg, and J. Richter. Ferromagnetic coupling in nonmetallic𝐶𝑢 2+ compounds. Phys. Rev. B, 52(1):313–323, July 1995
work page 1995
-
[66]
S. Feldkemper and W. Weber. Generalized calculation of magnetic coupling constants for Mott-Hubbard insulators: Application to ferromagnetic Cr compounds. Phys. Rev. B, 57(13):7755–7766, April 1998
work page 1998
- [67]
- [68]
- [69]
- [70]
-
[71]
E. E. Kaul, H. Rosner, N. Shannon, R. V. Shpanchenko, and C. Geibel. Evidence for a frustrated square lattice with ferromagnetic nearest-neighbor interaction in the new compound𝑃 𝑏 2𝑉 𝑂(𝑃 𝑂4)2. J. Magn. Magn. Mater., 272-276:922–923, May 2004
work page 2004
-
[72]
H. Kageyama, T. Kitano, N. Oba, M. Nishi, S. Nagai, K. Hirota, L. Viciu, J. B. Wiley, J. Yasuda, Y. Baba, Y. Ajiro, and K. Yoshimura. Spin-Singlet Ground State in Two- Dimensional S=1/2 Frustrated Square Lattice: (𝐶𝑢𝐶𝑙)𝐿𝑎𝑁 𝑏 2𝑂7. J. Phys. Soc. Jpn., 74(6):1702–1705, June 2005
work page 2005
-
[73]
Deepa Kasinathan, A. B. Kyker, and D. J. Singh. Origin of ferromagnetism in 𝐶𝑠 2𝐴𝑔𝐹 4: The importance of𝐴𝑔−𝐹covalency. Phys. Rev. B, 73(21):214420, June 2006
work page 2006
-
[74]
M. Skoulatos, J. P. Goff, N. Shannon, E. E. Kaul, C. Geibel, A. P. Murani, M. Enderle, and A. R. Wildes. Spin correlations in the frustrated square lattice𝑃 𝑏 2𝑉 𝑂(𝑃 𝑂4)2. J. Magn. Magn. Mater., 310(2, Part 2):1257–1259, March 2007. REFERENCES46
work page 2007
-
[75]
R. Nath, A. A. Tsirlin, H. Rosner, and C. Geibel. Magnetic properties of 𝐵𝑎𝐶𝑑𝑉 𝑂(𝑃 𝑂 4)2: A strongly frustrated spin-1/2 square lattice close to the quan- tum critical regime. Phys. Rev. B, 78(6):064422, August 2008
work page 2008
-
[76]
P. Carretta, M. Filibian, R. Nath, C. Geibel, and P. J. C. King. Fluctuations and correlations in a frustrated S=1/2 square lattice with competing ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic interactions studied by muon-spin relaxation. Phys. Rev. B, 79(22):224432, June 2009
work page 2009
-
[77]
Alexander A. Tsirlin and Helge Rosner. Extension of the spin-1/2 frustrated square lattice model: The case of layered vanadium phosphates. Phys. Rev. B, 79(21):214417, June 2009
work page 2009
-
[78]
Tsirlin, Burkhard Schmidt, Yurii Skourski, Ramesh Nath, Christoph Geibel, and Helge Rosner
Alexander A. Tsirlin, Burkhard Schmidt, Yurii Skourski, Ramesh Nath, Christoph Geibel, and Helge Rosner. Exploring the spin-1/2 frustrated square lattice model with high-field magnetization studies. Phys. Rev. B, 80(13):132407, October 2009
work page 2009
-
[79]
M. Skoulatos, J. P. Goff, C. Geibel, E. E. Kaul, R. Nath, N. Shannon, B. Schmidt, A. P. Murani, P. P. Deen, M. Enderle, and A. R. Wildes. Spin correlations and exchange in square-lattice frustrated ferromagnets. Europhys. Lett., 88(5):57005, De- cember 2009
work page 2009
-
[80]
Alexander A. Tsirlin, Ramesh Nath, Artem M. Abakumov, Roman V. Shpanchenko, Christoph Geibel, and Helge Rosner. Frustrated square lattice with spatial anisotropy: Crystal structure and magnetic properties of𝑃 𝑏𝑍𝑛𝑉 𝑂(𝑃 𝑂 4)2. Phys. Rev. B, 81(17):174424, May 2010
work page 2010
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.