Ground-State Phase Diagram of (1/2,1/2,1) Mixed Diamond Chains with Single-Site Anisotropy
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 06:52 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Mixed diamond chains with (1/2,1/2,1) spins exhibit anisotropy inversion where easy-plane and easy-axis behaviors swap their phase types.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The ground-state phase diagram of the (1/2,1/2,1) mixed diamond chain with single-site anisotropy D consists of a Néel ordered phase, a nonmagnetic Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid phase, and quantized and partial ferrimagnetic phases. A region with anisotropy inversion is found where the Ising-like Néel phase is realized for the easy-plane anisotropy D >0 and the XY-like Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid phase is realized for the easy-axis anisotropy D <0 on the S=1 sites.
What carries the argument
The (1/2,1/2,1) mixed diamond chain with vertex-apical exchange couplings modified by parameters delta and lambda, plus single-site anisotropy D on the S=1 apical spin; this lattice structure and its Hamiltonian enable the phase identification through finite-size numerics and limiting-case analysis.
If this is right
- The Néel phase is Ising-like for D>0 inside the inversion region.
- The Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid is XY-like for D<0 inside the inversion region.
- Quantized ferrimagnetic phases appear at specific values of magnetization per unit cell.
- Partial ferrimagnetic phases occupy additional regions of the diagram.
- Phase boundaries obtained numerically match analytical results in various limiting cases.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The inversion region may be located by scanning the sign of D while monitoring the character of correlations in the Néel and liquid phases.
- Materials approximating this mixed-spin diamond geometry could be tested for swapped anisotropy responses in magnetization or specific heat.
- The same numerical protocol could be applied to nearby values of the apical spin magnitudes to check whether the inversion persists.
Load-bearing premise
Finite-size exact diagonalization and DMRG calculations together with analytical approximations correctly identify the thermodynamic-limit phases and the location of the anisotropy inversion boundary.
What would settle it
DMRG results on significantly larger system sizes that show the anisotropy inversion region shrinking to zero width or vanishing entirely.
Figures
read the original abstract
The ground-state phases of mixed diamond chains with ($S, \tau^{(1)}, \tau^{(2)})=(1/2,1/2,1)$, where $S$ is the magnitude of vertex spins, and $\tau^{(1)}$ and $\tau^{(2)}$ are those of apical spins, are investigated with the single-site anisotropy $D$ on the $\tau^{(2)}$-site. The two apical spins in each unit cell are coupled by an exchange coupling $\lambda$. The vertex spins are coupled with the top and bottom apical spins by exchange couplings $1+\delta$ and $1-\delta$, respectively. The ground-state phase diagram is determined using the numerical exact diagonalization and DMRG method in addition to the analytical approximations in various limiting cases. The phase diagram consists of a N\'eel ordered phase, a nonmagnetic Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid phase, and quantized and partial ferrimagnetic phases. A region with anisotropy inversion is found where the Ising-like N\'eel phase is realized for the easy-plane anisotropy $D >0$ and the XY-like Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid phase is realized for the easy-axis anisotropy $D <0$ on the $S=1$ sites.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript determines the ground-state phase diagram of the (1/2,1/2,1) mixed diamond chain with single-site anisotropy D acting on the S=1 sites. The Hamiltonian includes tunable inter-apical coupling λ and bond alternation δ. Using exact diagonalization, DMRG, and limiting-case analytic approximations, the authors map out Néel, Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid (TLL), quantized ferrimagnetic, and partial ferrimagnetic phases, and report an “anisotropy inversion” region in which the Néel phase (Ising-like) appears for D>0 while the TLL phase (XY-like) appears for D<0.
Significance. If the reported inversion survives the thermodynamic limit, the result is noteworthy because it inverts the conventional expectation that easy-axis anisotropy stabilizes Ising order and easy-plane anisotropy stabilizes XY order. The work supplies a concrete numerical example in a frustrated mixed-spin geometry and supplies analytic limits that can serve as benchmarks for future studies.
major comments (1)
- [Results and Discussion (phase-boundary figures)] The location and even the existence of the anisotropy-inversion boundary are extracted from finite-L ED and DMRG data. No explicit finite-size extrapolation (gap scaling, order-parameter scaling, or Luttinger-parameter flow versus 1/L) is shown for the inversion line itself. Because distinguishing a gapped Néel phase from a gapless TLL and locating the D-value at which their characters invert both require controlled L→∞ extrapolation, the central claim remains vulnerable to residual finite-size drift.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract and §2] The abstract and introduction should state the system sizes used for the DMRG runs and the maximum bond dimension retained, so that readers can immediately assess the numerical effort.
- [Model Hamiltonian] Notation for the two apical spins (τ¹, τ²) and the vertex spin S should be introduced once in the Hamiltonian definition and used consistently thereafter.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive feedback. The major comment raises a valid point about finite-size effects on the anisotropy-inversion boundary. We address it below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Results and Discussion (phase-boundary figures)] The location and even the existence of the anisotropy-inversion boundary are extracted from finite-L ED and DMRG data. No explicit finite-size extrapolation (gap scaling, order-parameter scaling, or Luttinger-parameter flow versus 1/L) is shown for the inversion line itself. Because distinguishing a gapped Néel phase from a gapless TLL and locating the D-value at which their characters invert both require controlled L→∞ extrapolation, the central claim remains vulnerable to residual finite-size drift.
Authors: We agree that the absence of explicit finite-size scaling for the inversion line leaves the central claim open to finite-size drift. While our ED (L≤20) and DMRG (L≤100) data show stable boundaries across the sizes examined, no gap or order-parameter extrapolations versus 1/L were performed specifically for the inversion point. In the revised manuscript we will add (i) DMRG gap scaling for several cuts across the inversion region and (ii) order-parameter scaling to extrapolate the location of the Néel–TLL boundary in the thermodynamic limit. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; phase diagram obtained by direct numerical computation
full rationale
The work determines the ground-state phases via exact diagonalization, DMRG, and limiting-case analytical approximations applied to the given Hamiltonian. No load-bearing step reduces by construction to a fitted quantity extracted from the same data, nor to a self-citation chain, nor to an ansatz smuggled via prior work. The anisotropy-inversion region is reported as an output of those computations, not an input. This is the standard non-circular outcome for a direct numerical survey.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (3)
- λ
- δ
- D
axioms (2)
- standard math The system is described by a local spin Hamiltonian with nearest-neighbor exchange and on-site anisotropy terms.
- domain assumption Ground states can be classified into Néel, Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid, and ferrimagnetic phases using standard order parameters and correlation functions.
Reference graph
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Introduction Various exotic quantum phases emerge in low- dimensional frustrated quantum magnets as a result of the interplay of quantum fluctuation and frustration. 1, 2) The conventional diamond chain3, 4) is one of the simplest examples of such systems that can be analyzed thanks to the infinite number of local conservation laws ana- lytically. Extensive...
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Ground-State Phase Diagram of (1/2,1/2,1) Mixed Diamond Chains with Single-Site Anisotropy
Model We investigate the ground-state phases of (1 / 2, 1/ 2, 1) mixed diamond chains with the single-site anisotropy de- scribed by the following Hamiltonian: H = L∑ l=1 [ (1 + δ)Sl(τ (1) l + τ (1) l− 1) + (1 − δ)Sl(τ (2) l + τ (2) l− 1) + λτ (1) l τ (2) l + Dτ (2)z2 l ] , (1) where Sl, τ (1) l and τ (2) l are spin operators with magni- tudes Sl = τ(1) l...
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Limiting Cases 3.1 λ = 0 The system is unfrustrated. In the isotropic case D = 0, the ground state is the QF phase with spontaneous magnetization msp = 1 per unit cell according to the Lieb-Mattis (LM) theorem. 8, 9) In the presence of easy- axis anisotropy D < 0, this state remains as the QF phase with mz sp = 1. This phase is called the LM1 phase. On th...
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F and AF stand for ferromagnet and antiferro- magnet, respectively
6(1 + 2 D/ 5λ ). F and AF stand for ferromagnet and antiferro- magnet, respectively. alized for easy-plane anisotropy D > 0 on the S = 1 sites and the XY-like TLL phase is realized for easy- axis anisotropy D < 0 on the S = 1 sites in the range δc > δ > 0. This implies that the effect of D is inverted in this regime. This is also confirmed numerically in th...
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Numerical Results 4.1 Case of easy plane anisotropy : D = 1 We have carried out the numerical exact diagonaliza- tion (NED) calculation for L = 4, 6, and 8 to obtain the ground-state phase diagram of Fig. 2 for D = 1. Around the center of the phase diagram, there are sev- eral ferrimagnetic phases. In the thermodynamic limit, these phases are expected to ...
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The phase diagram consists of a N´ eel ordered phase, a nonmagnetic TLL phase, QF and PF phases
Summary and Discussion The ground-state phase diagram of mixed diamond chains with the Hamiltonian (1) is determined using the NED and the DMRG method in addition to the analyt- ical approximations in various limiting cases. The phase diagram consists of a N´ eel ordered phase, a nonmagnetic TLL phase, QF and PF phases. A region with anisotropy inversion ...
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discussion (0)
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