Frustrated quantum magnetism in the Kondo lattice on the zigzag ladder
Abstract
The interplay between Kondo effect, indirect magnetic interaction and geometrical frustration is studied in the Kondo lattice on the one-dimensional zigzag ladder. Using the density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG), the ground state and various short- and long-range spin- and density-correlation functions are calculated for the model at half-filling as a function of the antiferromagnetic Kondo interaction down to J=0.3t where t is the nearest-neighbor hopping on the zigzag ladder. Geometrical frustration is shown to lead to at least two critical points: Starting from the strong-J limit, where almost local Kondo screening dominates and where the system is a nonmagnetic Kondo insulator, antiferromagnetic correlations between nearest-neighbor and next-nearest-neighbor local spins become stronger and stronger, until at J dim c ≈ 0.89t frustration is alleviated by a spontaneous breaking of translational symmetry and a corresponding transition to a dimerized state. This is characterized by antiferromagnetic correlations along the legs and by alternating antiferro- and ferromagnetic correlations on the rungs of the ladder. A mechanism of partial Kondo screening that has been suggested for the Kondo lattice on the two-dimensional triangular lattice is not realized in the one-dimensional case. Furthermore, within the symmetry-broken dimerized state, there is a magnetic transition to a 90 quantum spin spiral with quasi-long-range order at J mag c ≈ 0.84t. The quantum-critical point is characterized by a closure of the spin gap (with decreasing J) and a divergence of the spin-correlation length and of the spin-structure factor S(q) at wave vector q=π/2. This is opposed to the model on the one-dimensional bipartite chain, which is known to have a finite spin gap for all J>0 at half-filling.
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