The effect of the quenched bond-randomness on the ordering of the S = 1/2 antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model on the kagome lattice is investigated by means of an exact-diagonalization method. When the randomness exceeds a critical value, the ground state of the model exhibits a transition within the non-magnetic state into the randomness-relevant gapless spin-liquid state. Implications to the S = 1/2 kagome-lattice antiferromagnet herbertsmithite is discussed.Since the proposal by P.W. Anderson of the resonating valence bond state [1], the quantum spin-liquid (QSL) state possibly realized in certain S = 1/2 frustrated magnets has attracted interest of researchers [2]. After a long experimental quest, several candidate materials were recently reported in geometrically frustrated magnets, including both the triangular-lattice and the kagome-lattice antiferromagnets (AFs).Examples of the triangular-lattice AF might be S = 1/2 organic salts such as κ-(ET) 2 Cu 2 (CN) 3 [3][4][5][6] and [7][8][9][10], which exhibit no magnetic ordering, neither regular nor random, down to a very low temperature. The QSL state of these compounds exhibits gapless behaviors characterized by, e.g., the lowtemperature specific heat [4,9] or the thermal conductivity [5,8] linear in the absolute temperature T . An example of the second category, the kagome-lattice AF, might be herbertsmithite CuZn 3 (OH) 6 Cl 2 [11][12][13][14][15][16][17]. No magnetic order is observed down to 20mK in spite of the exchange coupling of 180K, while gapless behaviors are observed in various physical quantities.The origin of the QSL behavior observed in these triangular-lattice organic salts and the kagome-lattice herbertsmithite has attracted tremendous interest, and various theoretical proposals have been made. The simplest possible reference model might be the S = 1/2 AF Heisenberg model with the nearest-neighbor (n.n.) bilinear coupling. In the triangular case, the ground state of such n.n. model is known to be the standard AF longrange order (LRO), the 120-degrees structure [18,19]. Hence, to explain the QSL behavior observed in these organic salts, some ingredient not taken into account in the simplest Heisenberg model is required. In the kagome case, by contrast, the ground state of the n.n. model is believed to be some sort of QSL state without the magnetic LRO, although its nature is still under hot debate. Various scenarios, including the Z 2 spin liquid [20][21][22][23][24], the algebraic U(1) spin liquid [25][26][27][28], the chiral spin liquid [29] and the valence bond crystal (VBC) [30][31][32] etc. have been proposed. It is not entirely clear at the present stage, however, which of these, or any of these, applies to the experimentally observed QSL state of herbertsmithite.Most of the recent theories pre-assumes that the system is clean enough that the quenched randomness plays a negligible role. Meanwhile, it was recently suggested in ref. [33] that the QSL of the triangular-lattice organic salts might be the randomness-induced one, the randomsi...