English

Low-frequency excess vibrational modes in two-dimensional glasses

Disordered Systems and Neural Networks 2021-12-22 v1 Soft Condensed Matter

Abstract

Glasses possess more low-frequency vibrational modes than predicted by Debye theory. These excess modes are crucial for the understanding the low temperature thermal and mechanical properties of glasses, which differ from those of crystalline solids. Recent simulational studies suggest that the density of the excess modes scales with their frequency ω\omega as ω4\omega^4 in two and higher dimensions. Here, we present extensive numerical studies of two-dimensional model glass formers over a large range of glass stabilities. We find that the density of the excess modes follows Dexc(ω)ω2D_\text{exc}(\omega)\sim \omega^2 up to around the boson peak, regardless of the glass stability. The stability dependence of the overall scale of Dexc(ω)D_\text{exc}(\omega) correlates with the stability dependence of low-frequency sound attenuation. However, we also find that in small systems, where the first sound mode is pushed to higher frequencies, at frequencies below the first sound mode there are excess modes with a system size independent density of states that scales as ω3\omega^3.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2107.01505,
  title  = {Low-frequency excess vibrational modes in two-dimensional glasses},
  author = {Lijin Wang and Grzegorz Szamel and Elijah Flenner},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2107.01505},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

6 pages and Supplemental Material

R2 v1 2026-06-24T03:52:12.622Z