Sen Arnab, Moessner R
Department of Theoretical Physics, Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science, Kolkata-700032, India.
Max-Planck-Institut für Physik komplexer Systeme, 01187 Dresden, Germany.
Phys Rev Lett. 2015 Jun 19;114(24):247207. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.114.247207. Epub 2015 Jun 18.
It is a salient experimental fact that a large fraction of candidate spin liquid materials freeze as the temperature is lowered. The question naturally arises whether such freezing is intrinsic to the spin liquid ("disorder-free glassiness") or extrinsic, in the sense that a topological phase simply coexists with standard freezing of impurities. Here, we demonstrate a surprising third alternative, namely, that freezing and topological liquidity are inseparably linked. The topological phase reacts to the introduction of disorder by generating degrees of freedom of a new type (along with interactions between them), which in turn undergo a freezing transition while the topological phase supporting them remains intact.