Abstract
Topological phase transitions involving intrinsic topological orders are usually characterized by qualitative changes of ground state quantum entanglement, which cannot be described by conventional mean-field theories with local order parameters. Here, we apply the lattice Chern-Simons theory to study frustrated quantum magnets and show that the conventional concepts, such as the order parameter and symmetry breaking, can still play a crucial role in certain topological phase transitions. The lattice Chern-Simons representation establishes a nonlocal mapping from quantum spin models to interacting spinless Dirac fermions. We show that breaking certain emergent symmetries of the fermionic theory could provide a unified approach to describing both magnetic and topological orders, as well as the topological phase transitions between them. We apply this method to the perturbed spin-1/2 XY model on the honeycomb lattice and predict a nonuniform chiral spin liquid ground state in the strong frustration region. This is further verified by our high-precision tensor network calculations. These results suggest that the lattice Chern-Simons theory can simplify the complicated topological phase transitions to effective mean-field theories in terms of fermionic degrees of freedom, which lead to different understandings that help to understand the frustrated quantum magnets.
- Received 1 February 2021
- Revised 11 September 2022
- Accepted 14 September 2022
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.106.L121117
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