1. Introduction
The issue of the adequate definition of the spin current had attracted significant interest because of its importance in spintronics’ applications [
1,
2,
3]. An et al. [
4] used the relativistic Dirac equation in order to define such a current. In addition, many other authors argued that the spin transport includes both linear displacement of spins as well as angular motion due to the rotation of the spins. One of the earliest problems encountered in the definition of the spin current is the satisfaction of the continuity equation [
5,
6]. It is interesting that spintronics experiments attempt to marry in practice between spin currents and electric currents, and create one current from the other and vice versa. It is as if these experiments try to prove in a practical manner some sort of symmetry between electricity and magnetism. We propose that, at a more fundamental level, these experiments attempt to prove the duality electricity–magnetism symmetry, which is missing from the Maxwell equations in the presence of matter (Maxwell equations are symmetric under the duality symmetry transformation in vacuum). While this symmetry is broken at the monopole level, it could approximately hold at the dipole level in materials where the charge degrees of freedom are practically frozen due to a large energy gap in their excitations. In such materials, the magnetic degrees of freedom carried by magnetic dipoles are responsible for the low-lying energy excitations. The low-dimensional (chains and ladders) Heisenberg antiferromagnets constitute a good example of these materials.
For these low-dimensional antiferromagnets, a natural way to deal with the difficulties associated with the definition of the magnetic particle and heat currents is the usage of the duality symmetry of electromagnetism. In the remainder of this manuscript, we will refer to the spin current and spin thermal current in these materials as magnetic current and magnetic thermal current, respectively. This relabeling is necessary in order to best reflect this symmetry between electricity and magnetism. It is well known that the Maxwell equations would have been fully symmetric under the duality transformation if magnetic monopoles existed. If they did, magnetic currents would have been defined in the same way as electric currents. In the present real situation where the duality symmetry between electricity and magnetism is broken in the presence of sources (matter), the magnetic dipoles resulting from the spins’ degrees of freedom of electrons do exist, however. In the Heisenberg antiferromagnets, these magnetic dipoles interact and form the so-called spin liquids that bear interesting similarities with the Fermi liquid states of electrons in conventional metals.
We define the magnetic current and magnetic thermal current after transforming the spin degrees of freedom using the Jordan–Wigner (JW) transformation in one-dimension (1D), or its generalized sisters in the case of ladders [
7,
8]. This approach is well suited for insulating antiferromagnets, like the linear-chain compound Sr
CuO
. Such materials are electrically insulating because the electric charge degrees of freedom are suppressed by large excitation energy gaps, and are characterized by spin-
moments that are arranged on chains or ladders. Due to their strong spatial anisotropic magnetic exchange interactions and large quantum fluctuations, they do not magnetically order even at very low temperatures. One of the interesting consequences of using the JW transformation is the definition of a magnetic current (rather than a spin current) because such a transformation puts the treatment of the spin degrees of freedom on the same footing as the electronic charge degrees of freedom in metals. We claim that this one-to-one correspondence between the magnetic moments (spins) in the Heisenberg antiferromagnets and electrons (charges) in metals is reminiscent of the duality symmetry of electricity and magnetism in vacuum, or even in matter had the magnetic monopoles [
9] been ubiquitous as electrons do–that is to say, that the original 1D JW and its higher dimension generalized sisters transform the spins into spinless fermions that behave exactly like electrons as far as Fermi statistics and transport properties are concerned.
The Heisenberg quantum antiferromagnets are modeled with the Heisenberg Hamiltonian that consists of exchange interactions between spins on adjacent sites. The 1D case relevant for Sr
CuO
, for example, is simpler to analyze, and will be used throughout this paper. Note, however, that the results of this work can be generalized to three-leg ladder systems, which behave as effective single Heisenberg chains especially when the interchain interaction is much greater than the intrachain one [
10]. The two-leg Heisenberg ladder is, however, gapped [
11], and an approach will be developed in the near future by taking into account this gap. Upon using the JW transformation, the 1D Hamiltonian maps into that of spinless fermions with a tight-binding kinetic energy term corresponding to the XY part of the spin Hamiltonian, and a repulsive interaction between JW fermions on adjacent sites resulting from the Ising term of the Hamiltonian. Afterwards, we define particle and thermal currents for these spinless fermions in the same way as for electrons in a metal, and use the techniques of transport theory including the Kubo formula for calculating the conductivity and the Green–Kubo formula for the magnetic thermal conductivity.
The driving force for the magnetic current of the spinless fermions can be provided by an external magnetic field with a gradient along the chain of spins. The reason for this is that the JW transformation maps the magnetic field in the Zeeman-coupling term onto the chemical potential for the spinless JW fermions, as is well known. Thus, a gradient in the magnetic field forces the spinless fermions to flow along the chain in order to lower their energy, just as electrons do in order to lower their energy when a gradient in the chemical potential is applied to them. Note that a magnetic field with a gradient, rather than a uniform magnetic field alone, is needed for the present case of a magnetic current because this magnetic current is not that of magnetic monopoles, but that of magnetic dipoles. This is similar to the fact that a gradient in the electric field can be the driving force for an electric dipole. The experimental work by Hirobe et al. [
12] reported the observation of spin current in Sr
CuO
, which resulted from a temperature gradient. Indeed a temperature gradient
can generate a flow of the JW fermions just as it does for electrons in metals. We, however, argue for and support the more convenient utilization of a magnetic field gradient. It is worth mentioning that we think that the Heisenberg antiferromagnets can be incorporated into spintronics devices without using electric contacts. The magnetic fields generated by circulating electric currents in the regular electric circuits of a given device can be taken advantage of to induce a magnetic current in the Heisenberg antiferromagnet part of the device.
The present paper is organized as follows. In
Section 2, the nature of the JW fermions is discussed in connection with the (broken) electricity-magnetism duality symmetry. In
Section 3, a review of the bond–mean-field theory (BMFT) applied to the Heisenberg chain in a magnetic field is presented. In
Section 4, the particle current density, the Green’s and spectral functions are calculated for the JW fermions. In
Section 5, the current–current correlation function is calculated and used to derive the conductivity of the JW fermions.
Section 6 deals with the calculation of the magnetic thermal conductivity. In
Section 7, the main result of the present work is discussed, and predictions for potential applications are outlined. Conclusions are drawn in
Section 8.
3. The Magnetic Current in the Bond–Mean Field Theory
In the presence of a magnetic field gradient along the chain, the Heisenberg model assumes the form:
where
J is the exchange coupling constant and
is a position dependent magnetic field that can be taken to vary linearly with position along the chain; i.e.,
with
a field per unit length. In terms of the JW fermions, Equation (
1), this Hamiltonian maps onto:
where
, with
g being the Landé factor and
the Bohr magneton. As is well known, a constant magnetic field
plays the role of the chemical potential for the JW fermions. Such a constant magnetic field is also known to polarize the spins along its direction, with the magnetization
for
, where
is the uniform spin susceptibility. A gradient in the magnetic field along the chain is equivalent to tilting the chemical potential. Such tilting causes the JW fermions to flow, thus creating a current of these fermionic particles. For the spin degrees of freedom, the flow of the JW fermions occurs with hopping amplitude
J/2 and results in the flow of spin flip fluctuations, since the presence of a JW fermion at a given site is a spin up and its absence is identified with a spin down; Equation (
1).
The need for a gradient in the magnetic field to drag the magnetic excitations resulting from the magnetic dipoles is similar to the fact that a gradient in an electric field is needed in order to drag electric dipoles; a uniform electric field alone does not act on the dipoles, except by a force couple. We think that this similarity is a consequence of the duality symmetry between electricity and magnetism. This, in turn, supports our claim that the JW transformation bears a signature of this symmetry.
We assume that the gradient in the magnetic field is much smaller than the spin exchange coupling. We thus calculate the magnetic conductivity and magnetic thermal conductivity using the (Green–)Kubo formula in the linear response approximation. The current of the JW fermions is readily defined as the magnetic current, and the current–current correlation function is evaluated in the limit of a uniform magnetic field to get this conductivity.
In Ref. [
11], the effect of a uniform field on the Heisenberg chain was investigated in the framework of the BMFT [
7]. In brief, the Hamiltonian in the presence of the Zeeman coupling term
with a uniform magnetic field
B along the
z-axis, takes on the form:
where
N is the total number of sites, and
is the magnetization per site. The two-component spinor
is given by:
and the Hamiltonian density matrix by:
where
is the
identity matrix and
the second Pauli matrix. Here,
with
having been defined as the spin bond parameter, and
. The chain is subdivided into two sublattices
A and
B as a consequence of the strong antiferromagnetic correlations that decay only algebraically with distance because the ground–state correlation length is infinite. Locally, the spins maintain a staggered orientation that justifies the use of the bipartite character. This gives rise to two types of JW fermions at the mean-field level, and the creation and annihilation operators are labeled by the two sublattice indexes. At the mean-field level, the chemical potential renormalizes to
if
, or to
if
in the fully saturated state.
is the uniform spin susceptibility, and
is the magnetic field above which the magnetization saturates [
14,
15].
Diagonalizing Equation (
6) yields the following energy eigenvalues:
The magnetization per site,
, and the bond parameter,
Q, are given by [
11]:
where
is the Fermi factor. Here,
is inverse temperature.
In order to calculate the magnetic particle and thermal conductivities, we will next calculate the current density, Green’s function and spectral function for the JW fermions within the BMFT. We deal first with the magnetic conductivity.
6. The Magnetic Thermal Conductivity
Using the definition of the the energy current operator
by Zotos, Naef, and Prelovsek [
17] for the Hamiltonian (
2), one gets:
In the absence of a magnetic field,
because the magnetization
. If we replace
by
in Equation (
17), the energy current density simplifies to:
when an external magnetic field is applied along the
z-axis. The magnetic thermal current
is obtained by subtracting
, where
h is the chemical potential of the JW fermions, and
is the particle current density. This gives:
where:
plays the role of the energy current at the mean-field level. Interestingly, the expression (
19) for the magnetic thermal current is the same as that obtained using the mean-field Hamiltonian with the renormalized chemical potential
. Taking into account the bipartite character of the lattice and transforming into Fourier space yield:
where the
matrix
with
and
. In the limit of a weak magnetic field; i.e.,
, which is realized for most real 1D Heisenberg antiferromagnets,
because
;
. In this case,
. The magnetic thermal conductivity within the linear response is given by the Green–Kubo formalism:
with:
We find that
;
because the cross term
. We note that the main contribution to the thermal current comes from the effective hopping of the JW fermions between sites belonging in the same sublattice, which is of order
. In zero field where
because
, only
survives, giving the following contributions:
As we did for the magnetic conductivity, we will derive a semi-classical expression for
. Hlubek et al. [
18,
19] reported that
is only limited by extrinsic scattering processes in the low-
T regime. We therefore use a constant imaginary part for self-energy; i.e.,
, and write for the term
in the spectral function as was done for the magnetic conductivity. The result is:
if the main contribution comes from
, which means that the summation over index
contributes only one term. In the low-
T limit with
, Equation (
24) can be evaluated yielding
linear in temperature. We assume the scattering processes, represented here by the scattering rate
, to be constant. In the absence of an external magnetic field, that is when
, one finds:
This result is the same as the one found using the kinetic estimate in Ref. [
20], namely
where
is the specific heat (
and
are the energy and the statistical occupation function of the state
k),
the velocity and
the mean free path of a particle with wavevector
k. In Equation (
25),
is the magnetic mean-free path, which is assumed to be the same as the mean-free path for the magnetic conductivity.
A magnetic Wiedemann–Franz law can be defined as with . Here, L differs from that in the Wiedemann–Franz law for true electrons by the absence of the factor in the denominator; e being the electron charge. When the same self-energy is used for thermal and particle transport in the Heisenberg antiferromagnets, the Wiedemann–Franz law is satisfied, implying that both transport phenomena are due to the spin fluctuations represented here by the motion of the JW fermions.
7. Discussion and Predictions
As far as potential practical applications are concerned, we predict that a magneto-motive force (mmf) could be realized using a
magnetic battery made of a sample of a Heisenberg antiferromagnet in the presence of a magnetic field with a gradient. Then, a magnetic current could be generated in a loop connected to this magnetic battery, and also made of the same Heisenberg antiferromagnet in the presence of a uniform magnetic field. The magnetic fields involved need not be large, and can be chosen to be much smaller than the saturation field
. The magnetic current obviously carries energy, and can be used in spintronics applications. Note that the magnetic circuits need not be coupled through interfaces to the electric circuits providing the magnetic fields. If the predictions of this work are confirmed experimentally, then we will have achieved some sort of practical realization and extension in matter of the symmetry of Maxwell equations in vacuum under the duality transformation
and
, where
and
are the electric and magnetic fields, respectively. The present proposal for generating magnetic currents could be more practical to realize than the other proposed or used methods that consist of selecting polarized spin-up or spin-down electrons. Because the Heisenberg antiferromagnets are insulators, the magnetic current is not accompanied by charge current at all. As mentioned earlier in this work, the spins in the Heisenberg chain are polarized along any nonzero applied uniform magnetic field. Using an interface with a metal, the magnetic current in a Heisenberg antiferromagnet should in principle give rise to an electromotive force by taking advantage of the inverse spin Hall effect (ISHE) [
21]. In addition, by switching the magnetic current on and off in a Heisenberg antiferromagnet, the variation in the magnetic field in these antiferromagnets may in principle be used to induce an electromotive force in an ordinary circuit in a contact-less manner contrary to ISHE.
8. Conclusions
In this work, we used the Jordan–Wigner transformation to argue in favor of the applicability of low-dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnets in the area of spintronics. We propose that this transformation not only preserves the spin commutation relations, but reflects also the duality symmetry that exists between magnetism and electricity in these materials whose charge (electrons) degrees are localized and their excitations gapped by a large energy. The dominating lowest-energy excitations are due to the electronic spins (magnetic dipoles), which are transformed into spinless fermions by the JW transformation. This transformation tells us that the spin magnetic moments turn into particles of spin zero. The spins in these antiferromagnets form spin liquid states, which are gapless for the Heisenberg chain or ladders with an odd number of legs, and gapped for ladders with an even number of legs. There is an interesting similarity between the gapless spin liquid states and the Fermi liquid states formed by electrons in conventional metals.
Given that the JW fermions behave like electrons as far as Fermi statistics is concerned, they are convenient for defining and calculating the magnetic current and magnetic thermal current for the spin- Heisenberg antiferromagnets. The magnetic conductivity and magnetic thermal conductivity, calculated in the present work for the Heisenberg chain within the bond–mean-field theory, are found to agree with existing results calculated using other methods. Finally, the central prediction made here is that of generating a magneto-motive force using a Heisenberg chain-like material in the presence of a magnetic field with a gradient. We believe that we succeeded to establish a theoretical framework for what the experiments in spintronics attempt to do, namely treating the magnetic degrees of freedom on the same footing as the electronic ones.
Future work will deal with the Heisenberg ladders given that several materials of this sort exist in reality, and may be of great importance for spintronics.