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Spin-current and other unusual phases in magnetized triangular lattice antiferromagnets Oleg Starykh, University of Utah collaborators: Jason Alicea, Leon Balents, Andrey Chubukov, Zhihao Hao, Ru Chen, Hyejin Ju, Hong-Chen Jiang Instabilities of 1/3 magnetization plateau Oleg Starykh, University of Utah collaborators: Jason Alicea, Leon Balents, Andrey Chubukov, Zhihao Hao, Ru Chen, Hyejin Ju, Hong-Chen Jiang Outline • Context: interesting experiments and theories • Magnetization curve • classical antiferromagnet in a field: entropic selection • Quantum spins - plateau due to quantum fluctuations • Instability: two-particle condensation at large S • Instability: transition to half-metal on lowering U ★ Conclusions Experiments S=1/2 Ono et al 2005 Tsuji 2007 Susuki 2013 s=1/2, Ba3CoNb2O9 s=1, Ba3NiNb2O9 Shirata et al, PRL 2012 Hwang et al, PRL 2012 Experiments S >> 1 plateau RbFe(MoO4)2: S=5/2 Fe3+ Svistov et al PRB (2003) Smirnov et al PRB (2007) Phase diagram contains only co-planar states (while classically - only non-planar cone state!) Two antiferromagnetically coupled layers Plateau width increases with T plateau is signaled by depression in dM/dH Theory: Magnetization plateau in one dimensional J1-J2 chain (zig-zag ladder) Okunishi, Tonegawa JPSJ (2003) Hikihara et al PRB (2010) S=1/2 M=1/3 plateau agrees with Oshikawa, Yamanaka, Affleck argument (PRL 2007): p S (1 - M) = integer S=1,3/2 Heirich-Meisner et al PRB (2007) p = period, S = spin, M = magnetization: M=1/3, p=3 possible for all S Theory: Connections with interacting bosons • surprisingly complex phase diagram of spatially anisotropic triangular lattice antiferromagnet • connections with interacting boson system – Superfluids (XY order) – Mott insulators – Supersolids Andreev, Lifshitz 1969 Nikuni, Shiba 1995 Heidarian, Damle 2005 Wang et al 2009 Jiang et al 2009 Tay, Motrunich 2010 VOLUME 87, NUMBER 9 PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS Magnetization Plateaus of SrCu2 !BO3 " 2 from a Chern-Simons Theory theory G. Misguich,1 Th. Jolicoeur,2 and S. M. Girvin3,4 1 Service de Physique Théorique, CE Saclay, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette, France Département de Physique, LPMC-ENS, 24 rue Lhomond, 75005 Paris, France 3 Department of Physics, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405-7105 4 Institute for Theoretical Physics, UCSB, Santa Barbara, California 93106-4030 (Received 21 February 2001; published 13 August 2001) proposals of liquid-like plateau states 2 The antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model on the frustrated Shastry-Sutherland lattice is studied by a mapping onto spinless fermions carrying one quantum of statistical flux. Using a mean-field approximation these fermions populate the bands of a generalized Hofstadter problem. Their filling leads to the magnetization curve. For SrCu2 !BO3 "2 we reproduce plateaus at 1#3 and 1#4 of the saturation moment and predict a new one at 1#2. Gaussian fluctuations of the gauge field are shown to be massive at these plateau values. PHYSICAL REVIEW B 75, 144411 !2007" DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.87.097203 Two-dimensional (2D) quantum spin systems that do not magnetically at zero temperature are currently Critical spin liquid at 3 magnetization in a spin- 2 triangular order antiferromagnet a subject of great theoretical and experimental interest. The recently discovered [1] compound SrCu2 !BO3 "2 is an 1 2 Jason Alicea and Matthew P. A. Fisher 1 1Physics Department, University of California, Santa Barbara, California antiferromagnet 93106, USA (AF) with localized spins S ! 2 , a gap the ground state [2], and the unique property that its 2 Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara,above California 93106, USA magnetization curve has plateaus at 1#3, 1#4, and 1#8 of !Received 10 February 2007; revised manuscript received 23 February 2007; published 10 April 2007" the full saturation moment [3]. The spin system may be 1 describedCsby a 2D Heisenberg model on a square lattice Although magnetically ordered at low temperatures, the spin- 2 triangular antiferromagnet 2CuCl4 exhibits 0 with exchange remarkable spin dynamics that strongly suggest proximity to a spin-liquid phase. Here we askconstant whetherJ a and additional diagonal bonds J imprint on half on of the plaquettes (see inset of Fig. 1). proximate spin liquid may also occur in an applied magnetic field, leaving a similar the square dynamical This lattice was 1 studied many years ago by Shastry and spin correlations of this material. Specifically, we explore a spatially anisotropic Heisenberg spin- 2 triangular Sutherland [4] who noted that there is an exact eigenstate 1 a “critical” spin-liquid antiferromagnet at 3 magnetization from a dual vortex perspective, and indeed find which is obtained by putting singlets on all diagonal J phase described by quantum electrodynamics in !2 + 1"-dimensions with an emergent SU!6" symmetry. bonds. This eigenstate isAthe ground state for a wide in0 number of nontrivial predictions follow for the dynamical spin structure factor in this “algebraic For Jliquid” #J smaller than $0.7 [5], the system terval of J 0 #J.vortex phase, which can be tested via inelastic neutron scattering. We also discuss how well-studied “up-up-down” has dimer long-range order, and for larger J 0 it has convenmagnetization plateaus can be captured within our approach, and further predicttional the existence of a stable Néel long-range AF order. There may be additional between such as a plaquette singlet phase [6–8] gapless solid phase in a weakly ordered up-up-down state. Finally, we predict phases several in anomalous “roton” but they are apparently not minima in the excitation spectrum in the regime of lattice anisotropy where the canted Néel state appears. realized in SrCu2 !BO3 "2 where J 0 #J is estimated to be smaller than 0.65 [9,10]. This dimer ground 75.10.Jm, state explains the spin gap as seen in experiments. DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.75.144411 PACS number!s": 75.40.Gb However, the existence of plateaus has no immediate explanation since the simplicity of the ground state does not extend toorder the excited states peculiar lattice. In this The quest for an unambiguous experimental realization of Low-temperature magnetic develops in of thethis presence Letterleading we usetoa amean-field quantum spin liquid remains a central pursuit in condensed of a magnetic field as well, rich phaseapproximation diagram.15 with a ChernSimons (CS) field-theoretic approach to quantum magnets Motivated in part by the observed zero-field phenomenology, matter physics, despite a long history dating back to Andersuggested some time ago [11,12], and we obtain an excelwe will explore the following question here. Can spin-liquid on’s suggestion that the nearest-neighbor Heisenberg trianlent quantitative fit of the magnetization curve [see Fig. 1] phases appear at nonzero magnetic field, which influence the ular antiferromagnet may realize a “resonating valence for realistic values of the exchange constants. As we dis1 Quite generally, the theoretical search at intermediate energies, just as it dynamics of Cs2CuCl4cuss, ond” ground state. this may be evidence for unconventional character of appears to be the case in the absence of a field? Several or models realizing such exotic quantum ground states has the plateau ground states. 15 makefrom thisthe scenario plausible arefirst excited state experimental features that ocused primarily on frustrated magnets in zero magnetic Starting pure dimer state, the worth noting. First, a broad temperature range characterized eld. The central goal of this paper is to take a first step at can be constructed by first breaking a singlet bond into by short-range order persists to sizable around J 0 , such a state a triplet up state. Becausefields of theofexchange nalyzing the situation when a finite magnetic field is present 1 27 AUGUST 2001 1 PACS numbers: 75.10.Jm, 73.21. –b, 75.40.Cx, 75.50.Ee forbidden at low orders in perturbation theory [2]. As a consequence, the triplet band is very flat, a striking fact observed by neutron scattering experiments [13]. Since the triplets are very massive particles, it is natural to expect that they can crystallize at finite density, and it has been proposed that the plateaus are Wigner crystals of triplets [14–16]. There exists a spin model which is derived from the Shastry-Sutherland Hamiltonian [17] for which the plateaus are demonstrated to originate from such ordered states. However, in this model there are plateaus at 1#4, 1#2, and 3#4, and the overall shape of the magnetization curve is not in agreement with experiments. A closely related physical picture is obtained by describing the magnetized triplets by hard-core bosons [15]. Then the repulsion may favor charge-density wave states that are among the known insulating phases of the lattice Bose gas. FIG. 1. Comparison between the magnetization curve of Outline • Context: interesting experiments and theories • Magnetization curve • classical antiferromagnet in a field: entropic selection • Quantum spins - plateau due to quantum fluctuations • Instability: two-particle condensation at large S • Instability: transition to half-metal on lowering U ★ Conclusions Magnetization curve and plateau Kawamura, Miyashita: classical Heisenberg model+Monte Carlo, 1985 Chubukov, Golosov: quantum large-S, 1991 square triangular ? A. Honecker , J. Schulenburg and J. Richter (2004) Classical isotropic triangular AFM in magnetic field • No field: spiral (120 degree) state • Magnetic field: accidental degeneracy H=J ! !i · S !j − S ! i i,j !h · S !i !h #2 1 !"! ! Si − H= J 2 3J ! • i∈! exists at single h value at T=0 !h form the lowest-energy manifold = 3J !i1 + S !i2 + S !i3 all states with S – 6 angles, 3 equations => 2 continuous angles (upto global U(1) rotation about h) Planar Umbrella (cone) No plateau possible Phase diagram Finite T: minimize F = E - T S Planar states have higher entropy! Head, Griset, Alicea, OS 2010 Phase diagram of the classical model why so stable? Collinear UUD state does not break U(1) symmetry (rotations about field axis). Z3 U(1) para Hence, no gapless Goldstone modes. All spin excitations are gapped. Z3 Z3 U(1) Seabra, Momoi, Sindzingre, Shannon 2011 Gvozdikova, Melchy, Zhitomirsky 2010 14 Quantum fluctuations, S >> 1, T=0. J’ = J: Quantum fluctuations select co-planar and collinear phases UUD plateau is due to interactions between spin waves hc2 - hc1 = (0.6/2S) hsat Exp: M=1/3 magnetization plateau in Cs2CuBr4 ★ Observed in Cs2CuBr4 (Ono 2004, Tsuji 2007) J’/J = 0.75 S=1/2 J’ J ★ first observation of “up-up-down” state in spin-1/2 triangular lattice antiferromagnet ★ total of 9 phases -- instead of 3 expected! Important: the lattice is strongly anisotropic, J’/J = 0.75 Spatially anisotropic model: classical prediction fails T=0 J H = ∑ J ijSi ⋅ S j − h ∑ S 〈 ij 〉 S=1 ! J != J 1 S= 2 0 1/3-plateau J’ i hsat 0 z i hsat h h Umbrella state: favored classically; energy gain (J-J’)2/J Planar states: favored by quantum fluctuations; energy gain J/S The competition is controlled by ! 2 2 δ = S(J − J ) /J dimensionless parameter Our semiclassical approach: treat spatial anisotropy (J-J’) as a perturbation to interacting spin waves fully polarized state V incommensurate: fan h V commensurate distorted umbrella (2) planar hc2 UUD plateau BEC k = 0 BEC k != 0 2 low-energy gapped modes hc1 commensurate planar distorted umbrella (1) incommensurate zero-field spiral 1 Cs2CuBr4 2 Alicea, Chubukov, Starykh PRL 102, 137201 (2009) 3 Cs2CuCl4 subject to significant DM 4 ! δ ~ S(1 - J’/J)2 “Exact” dilute boson calculation incomm. planar h commensurate planar distorted umbrella (2) hc2 UUD plateau hc1 BEC k != 0 2 low-energy gapped modes planar distorted umbrella (1) incommensurate 1 2 3 Variational wave function calculation Tay, Motrunich PRB 2010 4 ! Outline • Context: interesting experiments and theories • Magnetization curve • classical antiferromagnet in a field: entropic selection • Quantum spins - plateau due to quantum fluctuations • Instability: two-particle condensation at large S • Instability: transition to half-metal on lowering U ★ Conclusions S=1/2 Model A B C y=1 J’ y=3 Winding vector J A ✤ y=2 y=1 B Periodic boundary conditions along y in numerical studies C Hamiltonian H= uesday, June 5, 2012 X x,y h 0 JSx,y · Sx+1,y + J (Sx,y · Sx,y+1 + Sx,y · Sx X x,y z Sx,y 1,y+1 ) Cs2CuCl4: J’/J = 0.34 Cs2CuBr4: J’/J = 0.5-0.7 ey V. Chubukov, and Oleg A. Starykh ornia Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125 University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706 University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 ted: September 22, 2008) Isotropic case: quantum fluctuations select coplanar states (agrees with semi-classical S>> 1 ally anisotropic 2D triangular antiferromagnet in a magnetic field. for calculations) all fields, but we show that the quantum phase diagram is much eau, two commensurate planar states, two incommensurate chiral ate separating the two chiral phases. Our analysis sheds light on 0.6 spin-1/2 system Cs2 CuBr4 . Fully polarized Width of 4 Ms/3 plateau 0.4 0.2 3 IC planar Ising Q≠(4π/3,0) 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 isotropic case: Chubukov+Golosov, 1991; Alicea, Chubukov, Starykh, 2008 Magnetic field h d quanh distorted planar Ising cone umbrella (2) ting or- Q=(4 π/3,0) C planar hc2 UUD preserves um fluccone 2 UUD plateau U(1) symmetry. s exemSDW materi-Ms/3 plateau hc1 Gapped spin waves (4π/3,0) magnetsQ= C planar distorted 1 Ising planar umbrella (1) nd weak SDW e latter, Ising QIC ≠(4π/3,0) 0 2 ! ⇠ S(1 J /J) oplanar 1 2 3 4 Interacting magnons perturbed by spatial anisotropy 0 a ates in 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 FIG. 2: Proposed phase diagram for the anisotropic nearestetization R=1-J’/J neighbor Heisenberg model near 1/3 magnetization (full field range Plateau phase Fully polarized 0.6 Width of Ms/3 plateau M/Ms=1/3 plateau:0.4 0.5 uud state 0.2 4 IC planar Ising Q≠(4 0π/3,0) 3 Ms/3 plateau 0.8 R = 0.0 1.0 cone SDW R = 0.2 0 0.5 Ising Q≠(4π/3,0) 0.1 0.6 -0.25 C planar Ising 0 0.0 0.4 cone 0.25 Q=(4π/3,0) 0.2 0.5 2 1 0.0 0.0 -0.25 Ising Q=(4 π/3,0) C planar z Sy Magnetic field h 0.25 0.2 0.25 0 0.3 -0.25 SDWx 0 0.4 0.5 0.6 R=1-J’/J 0.7 120 0.8 0.9 1.0 R = 0.4 R = 1- J’/J Weakly coupled chains Fully polarized 4 0.6 Width of Ms/3 plateau 0.4 Magnetic field h 0.2 IC planar Ising Q≠(4π/3,0) 3 0.0 0.0 Ising Q=(4 π/3,0) C planar 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 cone 2 cone SDW Ms/3 plateau weakly coupled chains Q=(4π/3,0) 1 C planar Ising SDW Ising QIC ≠(4π/3,0) 0 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 R=1-J’/J 0.7 0.8 0.9 J’ << J 1.0 R = 1- J’/J Ideal J-J’ model in magnetic field OS, Balents 2007 • Two important couplings for h>0 • Quantum phase transition between SDW and Cone states Magnetic field relieves frustration! dim 1/2πR2: 1 -> 2 dim 1+2πR2: 2 -> 3/2 spiral “cone” state “collinear” SDW kF ↓ − kF ↑ = 2δ = 2πM • “Critical point”: 1+2πR2 = 1/2πR2 gives at M = 0.3 0.4 Tc cone 0.3 0.2 1 sdw 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 M also: Kolezhuk, Vekua 2005 1/2 h/hsat 3-leg ladder: dominant SDW phase Ru Chen, Hyejin Ju, Hongchen Jiang, OS, Leon Balents (2012) Fully polarized 4 0.6 Width of Ms/3 plateau 0.4 Magnetic field h 0.2 IC planar Ising Q≠(4π/3,0) 3 0.0 0.0 Ising Q=(4 π/3,0) C planar 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 cone 2 cone SDW Ms/3 plateau KT Q=(4π/3,0) 1 C planar Ising SDW Ising QIC ≠(4π/3,0) 0 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 R=1-J’/J 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 SDW phase agrees with analytical predictions for J’ << J J-J’ model: magnetization plateaux via commensurate locking of SDW • “Collinear” SDW state locks to the lattice at low-T -“irrelevant” (1d) umklapp terms become relevant once SDW order is present (when commensurate): multiparticle umklapp scattering -strongest locking is at M=1/3 Msat Observed in Cs2CuBr4 (Ono 2004, Tsuji 07, Fortune 09) • down-spins at the centers of hexagons T “collinear” SDW polarized momentum locking ! Ψ†R ΨL "n Cs2CuBr4 Fortune et al 2009 “cone” 0.9 uud 1 h/hsat → (π − 2δ)n = 2πm → 2M = 1 − 2m/n n 3 4 5 5 6 m 1 1 1 2 1 2M 1/3 1/2 3/5 1/5 2/3 naively thinking 1/3 2/3 Plateau more carefully OS, Katsura, Balents PRB 2010 • Umklapp must respect triangular lattice symmetries fy(x) ! fy(x + 1) – translation along chain direction – spatial inversion Z (n) Humk n dx tn cos[ fy] R =Â y 0 width ⇠ J /J n 3 8 5 10 12 m 1 2 1 4 2 2M 1/3 1/2 3/5 1/5 2/3 2d) R(p ⌘n2/(4(4pR2 same parity condition 1)) large n leads to exponential suppression • Ladder: Kosterlitz-Thouless transition to the plateau state @ R=0.7±0.1 (J’/J = 0.3) because umklapp operator becomes irrelevant for J’/J -> 0 2m ⌘ n 2d)/2 n = m (mod 2) and ⇣ • n-th plateau width (in field) R(p fy(x) ! fy+1(x + 1/2) fy(x) ! pR fy( x) – translation along diagonal ⇣ 1 M (n,m) = 1 2 Plateau endpoint (3-leg ladder) • Ladder: Kosterlitz-Thouless transition to the plateau state @ R=0.7±0.1 (J’/J = 0.3) because umklapp operator becomes irrelevant for J’/J -> 0 Fully polarized 4 0.6 Width of Ms/3 plateau 0.4 Magnetic field h 0.2 IC planar Ising Q≠(4π/3,0) 3 0.0 0.0 Ising Q=(4 π/3,0) C planar 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 cone 2 cone SDW Ms/3 plateau KT Q=(4π/3,0) 1 C planar Ising SDW Ising QIC ≠(4π/3,0) 0 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 R=1-J’/J 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 Width of 1/3 Plateau Boundaries of 1/3 Plateau DMRG: From 3- to 6-leg ladder 2.1 R=0.0 R=0.2 R=0.4 R=0.6 1.8 1.5 1.2 (a) Ny=6 0.9 0.00 0.8 0.02 0.04 1/Nx 0.06 0.08 Ny=6 Ny=3 0.6 plateau expands in a wider ladder: stable phase in two dimensions 0.4 0.2 0.0 0.0 (b) 0.2 0.4 R 0.6 0.8 1.0 two-dimensional Schematic phase diagram for spin-1/2 triangular lattice AFM h/J 0.8 fully polarized 4 plateau width 0.6 0.4 0.2 3 0.0 0.0 IC planar C planar 2 0.4 R 0.6 C planar 0.8 1.0 cone SDW 1/3 1 0.2 plateau for all J’/J (crystal of spindowns; end-point at J’=0) SDW IC planar 0 0.0 quasi-collinear 0.2 0.4 0.6 R=1-J’/J 0.8 1.0 special feature of s=1/2 model S>>1 ? S=1/2 0.8 4 0.6 0.4 0.2 3 0.0 0.0 2 out of plateau transitions non-coplanar states 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 SDW 1 0 0.0 0.2 SDW 0.2 0.4 0.6 out of plateau transitions collinear SDW state 0.8 1-J’/J 1.0 Low-energy excitation spectra near the plateau’s end-point S>>1 Out[24]= d2 -k -k22 +k2 Out[25]= δ=4 k1 = k2 = k0 d1 -k0 +k0 k0 = r 3 10S Out[19]= -k1 +k1 A. Chubukov, OS, PRL 2013 Interaction between plateau’s eigen-modes (4) Hd1 d2 ⇣ 3 X (p, q) d†1,k0 +p d†2, = N p,q d†1,k0 +p d†2, k0 p d†1, k0 +q d†2,k0 q k0 p d1, k0 +q d2,k0 q † 1,p 2,q † 1,p † 2,q ! k02 3J |p||q| ⌘ + h.c. Out[25]= magnon pairs interact strongly near the plateau’s end-point δ=4 1/2,p = d1,±k0 +p d2,⌥k0 (p, q) = k0 3J p p2 + (1 `Superconducting’ solution with imaginary order parameter no single particle condensate! Instability = softening of twomagnon mode @ δcr = 4 - O(1/S2) p /4)k02 p k0 q2 + (1 /4)k02 ⌥ h 1,p i = h 2,q i ⇠ i |p| hd1/2,k i = 0 k0 1 1 X p 1= SN p |p|2 + (1 = + = + /4)k02 A. Chubukov, OS, PRL 2013 Two-magnon condensate = Spin-current state hc2 uud hc1 Υ<0 Υ>0 distorted umbrella spincurrent J J’ J’ distorted umbrella δcr 4 domain wall δ no transverse magnetic order hSx,y r i=0 Finite scalar (and vector) chiralities. Sign Y determines sense of spin-current circulation hẑ · SA ⇥ SC i = hẑ · SC ⇥ SB i = hẑ · SB ⇥ SA i / ⌥ but hSr · Sr0 i is not affected Spontaneously broken Z2 , in addition to broken Z3 inherited from the UUD state A. Chubukov, OS, PRL 2013 Spontaneous generation of Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (4) Hd1 d2 1 X p / N (k k2+k0 ik0 k0 )2 + (1 † † (d d 1,k 2, k /4)k02 d1,k d2, k) X p2 k0 p ik0 † † (d d 1,p 2, 2 (p + k0 )2 + (1 /4)k0 continuum limit of DM in triangular lattice X ẑ · Sr ⇥ (Sr+a1 + Sr+a2 ) a1 p d1,p d2, B || z r a2 Mean-field approximation: (4) Hd1 d2 !D X k k0 k0 † † ( + )(d1,k d2, |k k0 | |k + k0 | D⇠ 2 ⌥k0 ln( 4 4 k d1,k d2, ) spin currents appear due to spontaneously generated DM (similar to Lauchli et al (PRL 2005) for Heis.+ring exchange model; also ‘chiral Mott insulator’, Dhar et al, PRB 2013 ) k) p) “This could be the discovery of the century. Depending, of course, on how far down it goes” Magnetization plateau in itinerant electron systems • Heisenberg = large-U Hubbard model • What is the fate of M =1/3 plateau when U/t is reduced? simple mean-field analysis of the UUD state Zhihao Hao and OS, PRB 2013 Band structure and geometry, U=0 M=1/3 M=1/2 n" = 2/3 n" = 3/4 n# = 1/3 n# = 1/4 Brillouin zone of triangular lattice van Hove points n" + n# = 1 M/Msat = (n" n# ) Z. Hao, OS, PRB 2013 Band structure and geometry, U=0 M=1/3 M=1/2 n" = 2/3 n" = 3/4 n# = 1/3 n# = 1/4 Strong-coupling instability. Result = half-metal. Magnetization plateau state. Weak-coupling instability: arbitrary weak e-e interaction gaps out up-spins Fermi surface completely; down-spins FS reconstructs but remains gapless. Result = half-metal, electric current is carried by minority (down) spin electrons. Magnetization plateau state. Extensions reconstructed Fermi surface Other lattices: almost 1/2-filled square lattice Conclusions • Magnetization plateau are interesting states – collinear – commensurate – highly stable – allow access to novel magnetic phases • collinear SDW (s=1/2) • spin-current nematic (s > 1/2) • interaction-induced half-metals (works for many lattice geometries) Thank you!