Saturday, November 16, 2019
Calculations of the Spin Structure of Trimer Cr3
Calculations of the Spin Structure of Trimer Cr3 Calculation of Magnetic Properties by Generalized Spin Hamiltonian and Generationà of Global Entanglement: Cr Trimer in molecule and on surface Oleg V. Stepanyuk2, Oleg V. Farberovich1 1 Raymond and Bekerly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences,à School of Physics and Astronomy, Tel-Aviv University, Tel-Aviv 69978, Israel 2 Max Planck Institute of Microstructure Physics, Halle, Germany Here we present the results of the first-principles calculations of the spin structure of trimer Cr3à with the use of a density-functional scheme allowing for the non-collinear spin configurations inà [1]. Using the results of these calculations we determine the Heisenberg-Dirac-Van Vleck (HDVV)à Hamiltonian with anisotropic exchange couplings parameters linking the Cr ions with predominantà spin density. The energy pattern was found from the effective HDVV Hamiltonian acting in theà restricted spin space of the Cr ions by the application of the irreducible tensor operators (ITO)à technique. Comparison of the energy pattern with that obtained with the anisotropic exchangeà models conventionally used for the analysis of this system and with the results of non-collinearà spin structure calculations show that our complex investigations provides a good description of theà pattern of the spin levels and spin structures of the nanomagnetic trimer Cr3. The results areà discussed in the view of a general problem of spin frustration related to the orbital degeneracy ofà the antiferromagnetic ground state.à PACS numbers: I. INTRODUCTION Information technologies provide very interesting challengesà and an extremely wide playground in which scientistsà working in materials science, chemistry, physics andà nano-fabrication technologies may find stimuli for novelà ideas. Curiously, the nanometre scale is the molecularà scale. So we may wonder whether, how or simply whichà functional molecules can be regarded in some ways asà possible components of nanodevices. The goal is ambitious: it is not just a matter to store information in a 3dmetalà trimer on a non-magnetic substrate, but we mayà think to process information with a trimer and then toà communicate information at the supramolecules containgà from magnetic 3d-metal trimer on a surface. Spins are alternative complementary to charges as degreesà of freedom to encode information. Recent examples,à like for instance the discovery and application of Giantà magnetoresistance in Spintronics, have demonstratedà the efficient use of spins for information technologies. Moreover, spins are intrinsically quantum entities andà they have therefore been widely investigated in the fieldà of quantum-information processing. Molecular nanomagnetsà are real examples of finite spin chains (1D) or clustersà (0D), and therefore they constitute a new benchmarkà for testing models of interacting quantum objects. New physics of molecular magnets feeds hopes of certainà prospective applications, and such hopes pose theà problem of understanding, improving, or predicting desirableà characteristics of these materials. The applicationsà which come into discussion are, for instance, magneticà storage (one molecule would store one bit, withà much higher information storage density than accessibleà with microdomains of present-day storage media or magneticà nanoparticles of next future). In order to exploità the quantum features for information processing, molecularà spin clusters have to fulfil some basic requirements. Magnetic transition metal nanostructures on nonmagneticà substrates have attracted recently large attentionà due to their novel and unusual magnetic properties[2,3]. The supported clusters experience both theà reduction of the local coordination number, as in freeà clusters, as well as the interactions with the electronicà degrees of freedom of the substrate, as in embedded clusters.à The complex magnetic behavior is usually associatedà with the competition of several interactions, suchà as interatomic exchange and bonding interactions, andà in some cases noncollinear effects, which can give rise toà several metastable states close in energy. The groundà state can therefore be easily tuned by external actionà giving rise to the switching between different states. In recent years, entanglement has attracted the attentionà of many physicists working in the area of quantumà mechanics [1, 2]. This is due to the ongoing research inà the area of quantum information [3]. Theoretical studiesà are also important in the context of spin interactionsà inside two structured reservoirs [9] such as single magneticà molecule (SMM) and metal cluster on nonmagneticà surface. Cr is unique among the transition-metalà adatoms, because its half-filled valence configurationà (3d54s1) yields both a large magnetic moment and strongà interatomic bonding leading to magnetic frustration. Weà apply our method to Cr trimers deposited on a Au(111)à surface and the trinuclear hydroxo-bridged chromiumà ammine complex [Cr3(NH3)10(OH)4]Br5 à · 3H2O. Low-lying excited states of a magnetic system are generallyà described in terms of a general spin-Hamiltonian. For a magnetic system with many spin sites, this phenomenologicalà Hamiltonian is written as a sum of pairwiseà spin exchange interactions between adjacent spinà sites in molecule and surface. In the present work we study entanglement betweenà the spin states in the spin spectrum. In our model, aà spin state interact with a continuum of the spin structureà at interval temperature 0 ââ¬â 300 K, and entanglementà properties between the spin states in spin structure areà considered. Using global entanglement as a measure ofà entanglement, we derive a pair of distributions that canà be interpreted as densities of entanglement in terms ofà all the eigenvalue of the spin spectrum. This distributionà can be calculated in terms of the spectrum of spin excitationà of cluster surface and supramolecule. With theseà new measures of entanglement we can study in detailà entanglement between the spin modes in spin structure. The method developed here, in terms of entanglementà distributions, can also be used when considering variousà types of structured reservoirs [..]. II. THE THEORETICAL APPROACH In order to give a theoretical description of magneticà dimer we exploit the irreducible tensor operator (ITO)à technique [ITO]. Let us consider a spin cluster of arbitraryà topology formed from an arbitrary number of magneticà sites, N, with local spins S1, S2,, SN which, inà general, can have different values. A successive spin couplingà scheme is adopted: S1 + S2 = SÃÅ"2, SÃÅ"2 + S3 = SÃÅ"3, , SNÃÅ"à ´Ã¢â ¬Ã¢â ¬Ã¢â ¬1 + SN = S, where ÃÅ" S represents the complete set of intermediate spinà quantum numbers SÃÅ"k, with k=1,2,,N-1.The eigenstatesà | và ¢Ã
¸Ã © of spin-Hamiltonian will be given by linear combinationsà of the basis states | ( ÃÅ" S)SMà ¢Ã
¸Ã ©: | và ¢Ã
¸Ã © = à £ (~S )SM à ¢Ã
¸Ã ¨(~S )SM | và ¢Ã
¸Ã © | (~S )SMà ¢Ã
¸Ã ©, (1) where the coefficients à ¢Ã
¸Ã ¨( ÃÅ" S)SM | và ¢Ã
¸Ã © can be evaluated onceà the spin-Hamiltonian of the system has been diagonalized. Since each term of spin-Hamiltonian can be rewrittenà as a combination of the irreducible tensor operatorsà technique[ITO].In [ITO] work focus on the main physicalà interactions which determine the spin-Hamiltonian andà to rewrite them in terms of the ITOââ¬â¢s. The exchangeà part of the spin-Hamiltonian is to introduced: Hspin = H0 + HBQ + HAS + HAN. (2) The first term H0 is the Heisenberg-Dirac Hamiltonian,à which represents the isotropic exchange interaction, HBQà is the biquadratic exchange Hamiltonian, HAS is the antisymmetricà exchange Hamiltonian,and HAN representsà the anisotropic exchange interaction. Conventionally,à they can be expressed as follows [ITO]: H0 = âËâ2 à £ i;f Jif bSi bSf (3) HBQ = âËâ à £ i;f jif ( bSi bSf )2 (4) HAS = à £ i;f Gif [ bSi Ãâ" bSf ] (5) HAN = âËâ2 à £ i;f à £ _ J_ if bS_ i bS_ f (6) with à ± = x, y, z We can add to the exchange Hamiltonianà the term due to the axial single-ion anisotropy: HZF = à £ i Di bSz(i)2 (7) where Jif and J_à if are the parameters of the isotropic andà anisotropic exchange iterations, jif are the coefficients ofà the biquadratic exchange iterations,and Gif=-Gfi is theà vector of the antisymmetric exchange. The terms of theà spin-Hamiltonian above can be written in terms of theà ITOââ¬â¢s. Both the Heisenbergââ¬âDirac and biquadratic exchangeà are isotropic interactions. In fact, the correspondingà Hamiltonians can be described by rank-0 tensor operatorsà and thus have non zero matrix elements onlyà with states with the same total spin quantum numberà S (ÃâS,ÃâM=0). The representative matrix can be decomposedà into blocks depending only on the value of Sà and M. All anisotropic terms are described by rank-2à tensor operators which have non zero matrix elementsà between state with ÃâS=0,à ±1,à ±2 and their matrices canà not be decomposed into blocks depending only on totalà spin S in account of the Sââ¬âmixing between spin statesà with different S. The single-ion anisotropy can be writtenà in terms of rank-2 single site ITOââ¬â¢s [ITO]. Finally,à the antisymmetric exchange term is the sum of ITOââ¬â¢s ofà rank-1. The ITO technique has been used to design the MAGPACKà software [ITO1], a package to calculate the energyà levels, bulk magnetic properties, and inelastic neutronà scattering spectra of high nuclearity spin clusters thatà allows studying efficiently properties of nanoscopic magnets. A. Calculation of the magnetic properties Once we have the energy levels, we can evaluate differentà thermodynamic properties of the system as magnetization,à magnetic susceptibility, and magnetic specificà heat. Because anisotropic interactions are not included,à the magnetic properties of the anisotropic system do notà depend on the direction of the magnetic field. For thisà reason one can consider the magnetic field directed alongà arbitrary axis Z of the molecular coordinate frame thatà is chosen as a spin quantization axis. In this case theà energies of the system will be à à µ_(Ms)+geà ²MsHZ, whereà à à µ_(Ms) are the eigenvalues of the Hamiltonian containingà magnetic exchange and double exchange contributionsà (index à ¼ runs over the energy levels with given totalà spin protection Ms). Then the partition function in theà presence of the external magnetic field is given by: Z(HZ) = à £ Ms;_ exp[âËâà à µ_(Ms)/kT] à £ Ms exp[âËâgeà ²MsHZ/kT] (8) Using this expression one can evaluate the magnetic susceptibilityà Ãâ¡ and magnetization M by standart thermodinamicalà definitions: Ãâ¡ = ( âËâM âËâH ) H!0 (9) M(H) = NkT âËâlnZ âËâH (10) B. Entanglement in N-spin system Entanglement has gained renewed interest with the developmentà of quantum information science. The problemà of measuring entanglement is a vast and lively field of researchà in its own. In this section we attempt to solve theà problem of measuring entanglement in the N-spin clusterà and supramolecules systems. Based on the residualà entanglement [9] (Phys. Rev. A 71, 044301 (2005)), weà present the global entanglement for a N-spin state for theà collective measures of multiparticle entanglement. Thisà measures introduced by Meyer andWallach[..]. The MeyerWallachà (MW) measure written in the Brennen form (G.K.Brennen,Quantum.Inf.Comp.,v.3,619 (2003)) is: Q(ÃË) = 2(1 âËâ 1 N à £N k=1 Tr[à 2 k]) (11) where à k is the reduced density matrix for k-th qubit.à The problem of entanglement between a spin states inà N-spin systems is becoming more interesting when consideringà clusters or molecules with a spectral gap in theirà densities of states. For quantifying the distribution ofà entanglement between the individual spin eigenvalues inà spin structure of N-spin system we use the density of entanglement. The density of entanglement à µ(à à µ_, à à µ_, à à µ)dà à µ gives the entanglement between the spin eigenvalue à à µ_ and spin eigenvalue à à µ_ with in an energy interval à à µ_ to à à µ_ + dà à µ_. One can show that entanglement distribution can beà written in terms of spectrum of spin exitation S(à à µ_, à à µ) = |c_|2 à ´(à à µ âËâ à à µ_) (12) and à µ(à à µ_, à à µ_, à à µ) = 2S(à à µ_, à à µ)S(à à µ_, à à µ) (13) where coefficient c_ = à ¢Ã
¸Ã ¨( ÃÅ" S)SM | và ¢Ã
¸Ã © is eigenvector of theà spin-Hamiltonian of the cluster or supramolecule. Thus,à entanglement distributions can be derived from the excitationà spin spectrum Q(à à µ) = 1âËâ 2Ãâ2 Ãâ¬2N à £N _=1 |c_|2 (à à µ âËâ à à µ_)2 + Ãâ2 à £N _=_+1 |c_|2 (à à µ âËâ à à µ_)2 + Ãâ2 (14) Though the very nature of entanglement is purelyà quantum mechanical, we saw that it can persist forà macroscopic systems and will survive even in the thermodynamicalà limit. In this section we discuss how ità behaves at finite temperature of thermal entanglement. The states in N-spin system describing a system in thermalà equilibrium states, are determined by the Generalizedà spin-Hamiltonian and thermal density matrix à (T) = exp(âËâHspin/kT) Z(HZ) (15) where Z(HZ) is the partition function of the N-spin system. The thermal entanglement is Q(à à µ, T,HZ) = 1 âËâ 2Ãâ2 Ãâ¬2NZ(HZ)2 à £N _=1 |c_|2 exp[âËâà à µ_/kT] (à à µ âËâ à à µ_)2 + Ãâ2 Ãâ" (16) à £N _=_+1 |c_|2 exp[âËâà à µ_/kT] (à à µ âËâ à à µ_)2 + Ãâ2 The demonstration of quantum entanglement, however,à can also be directly derived from experiments, withoutà requiring knowledge of the system state. This can beà done by using specific operatorsââ¬âthe so-called entanglementà witnessesââ¬âwhose expectation value is always positiveà if the state à is factorizable. It is quite remarkableà that some of these entanglement witnesses coincideà with well-known magnetic observables, such as energyà or magnetic susceptibility Ãâ¡ = dM/dB. In particular,à the magnetic susceptibility of N spins s, averaged overà three orthogonal spatial directions, is always larger thanà a threshold value if their equilibrium state à is factorizable: à £ g Ãâ¡g > Ns/kBT [EW]. This should not be surprising,à since magnetic susceptibility is proportional toà the variance of the magnetization, and thus it may actuallyà quantify spin.spin correlation. The advantage inà the use of this criterion consists in the fact that it doesà not require knowledge of the system Hamiltonian, providedà that this commutes with the Zeeman terms correspondingà to the three orthogonal orientations of theà magnetic field à ± = x, y, z. As already mentioned, inà the case of the Cr3 trimer, the effective Hamiltonian includes,à besides the dominant Heisenberg interaction J Ã¢Ë ¼118 meV , smaller anisotropic terms G Ã¢Ë ¼ 1.1 meV andà D Ã¢Ë ¼ 0.18 meV , due to which the above commutation relationsà are not fulfilled. This might, in principle, result inà differences between the magnetic susceptibility and theà entanglement witness WE (see Fig.). Apparently, theà difference is quite essential and therefore it is necessary to use a formula for global entanglement Q(ÃË) in N-spinà system. 4 10âËâ1 100 101 102 103 0 0.005 0.01 0.015 0.02 0.025 0.03 0.035 0.04 0.045 The calculated difference à ¯Ã¢â¬Å¡Ã ½EW(T)âËâEWa(T)à ¯Ã¢â¬Å¡Ã ½/EW(T)for Cr3 isosceles trimer T(K) à ¯Ã¢â¬Å¡Ã ½EW(T)âËâEWa(T)à ¯Ã¢â¬Å¡Ã ½/EW(T) FIG. 1: (Color online) The calculated difference j EW(T) à ´Ã¢â ¬Ã¢â ¬Ã¢â ¬ EWa(T) j =EW(T) for Cr3 isosceles trimer 0 100 200 300 400 0 2 4 6 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 Angle(Degrees) The calculated M(H) for Cr3 isosceles trimer H(T) M(à ¯Ãâà ¬B) FIG. 2: (Color online)Magnetization M(H) of the Cr3à isoscales trimer on metal surface as a function of angles from 0 to 360 degree C. Thermal global entanglement in static magnetic _eld 5 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 0 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25 The calculated variation of M(H) vs angle (magnetization switching) Angle(Degrees) M(à ¯Ãâà ¬B) 0.1Ts 0.2Ts 0.5Ts 1.0Ts FIG. 3: (Color online)The calculated variation of M(H) vsà angle (magnetization switching) for Cr3 isoscales trimerà FIG. 4: (Color online)The calculated density of global entanglementà vs temperature and energy for Cr3 isoscales trimer 6 0 100 200 300 400 0 2 4 6 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 Angle(Degrees) The calculated M(H) for Cr3 molecular magnet H(T) M(à ¯Ãâà ¬B) FIG. 5: (Color online)Magnetization M(H) of the Cr3 molecularà magnet as a function of angles from 0 to 360 degree 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 0 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25 0.3 0.35 0.4 0.45 0.5 The calculated variation of M(H) vs angle (magnetization switching) Angle(Degrees) M(à ¯Ãâà ¬B) 0.1Ts 0.2Ts 0.5Ts 1.0Ts FIG. 6: (Color online)The calculated variation of M(H) vsà angle (magnetization switching) for Cr3 molecular magnet 7 FIG. 7: (Color online)The calculated density of global entanglementà vs temperature and energy for Cr3 molecular magnetà FIG. 8: (Color online)The calculated entanglement for theà Cr3 isoscales trimer as a function of temperature and theà magnitude of the magnetic field Hpar. 8 FIG. 9: (Color online)The calculated entanglement for theà Cr3 isoscales trimer as a function of temperature and theà magnitude of the magnetic field Hper. FIG. 10: (Color online)The calculated entanglement for theà Cr3 isoscales trimer as a function of temperature and the magnitudeà of the magnetic field Hav. 9 FIG. 11: (Color online)The calculated entanglement for theà Cr3 molecular magnet as a function of temperature and theà magnitude of the magnetic field Hav.
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