Abstract
Starting from a modified version of the S=1/2 Kagome antiferromagnet to emphasize the role of elementary triangles, an effective Hamiltonian involving spin and chirality variables is derived. A mean-field decoupling that retains the quantum nature of these variables is shown to yield a Hamiltonian that can be solved exactly, leading to the following predictions: (i) The number of low-lying singlet states increases with the number of sites N like 1.15N; (ii) a singlet-triplet gap remains in the thermodynamic limit; (iii) spinons form bound states with a small binding energy. By comparing these properties with those of the regular Kagome lattice as revealed by numerical experiments, we argue that this description captures the essential low-energy physics of that model.
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