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Physicists confirm elusive quantum spin liquid in new study
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Physicists confirm elusive quantum spin liquid in new study
by Marcy de Luna for Rice News
Houston TX (SPX) Jun 26, 2025

An international team of scientists led by Rice University's Pengcheng Dai has confirmed the existence of emergent photons and fractionalized spin excitations in a rare quantum spin liquid. Published in Nature Physics on June 19, their findings identify the crystalline compound cerium zirconium oxide (Ce2Zr2O7) as a clear, 3D realization of this exotic state of matter.

Long a subject of theoretical intrigue, quantum spin liquids offer promise for revolutionary technologies, including quantum computing and dissipationless energy transmission. By refusing to conform to traditional magnetic behavior, these materials realize emergent quantum electrodynamics via highly quantum-entangled motions of magnetic moments at temperatures near absolute zero.

"We've answered a major open question by directly detecting these excitations," said Dai, the Sam and Helen Worden Professor of Physics and Astronomy. "This confirms that Ce2Zr2O7 behaves as a true quantum spin ice, a special class of quantum spin liquids in three dimensions."

Experimental clarity in a noisy field

The research team used state-of-the-art polarized neutron scattering techniques to isolate and identify the telltale signs of quantum spin liquid behavior. These tools allowed them to separate magnetic scattering from all other signals, even in the zero temperature limit.

Meanwhile, the measurements enabled them to discover emergent photon signals near zero energy - a key feature distinguishing quantum spin ice from other conventional phases in ordinary magnets. Complementary measurements of the compound's specific heat provided further support, suggesting that the predicted emergent photons have a dispersion similar to how sound travels in a solid.

Technical noise and incomplete data often hindered earlier efforts to validate such behavior. The Rice-led research team overcame these barriers through refined sample preparation and precision instruments, including international collaboration from major labs in Europe and North America.

A scientific first with a far-reaching impact

Notably, emergent photons and spinons - hallmarks of quantum spin ice - were observed in a 3D candidate material. The researchers' discovery settles a long-standing debate in condensed matter physics and provides a robust platform for exploring next-generation technologies.

This foundational result validates decades of theoretical predictions, said Bin Gao, a research scientist in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Rice and the study's first author.

"This surprising result encourages scientists to look deeper into such unique materials, potentially changing how we understand magnets and the behavior of materials in the extreme quantum regime," Gao said.

Research Report:Neutron scattering and thermodynamic evidence for emergent photons and fractionalization in a pyrochlore spin ice

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