Wave attenuation in glasses: Rayleigh and generalized-Rayleigh scattering scaling
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| Publication date | 14-09-2019 |
| Journal | Journal of Chemical Physics |
| Article number | 104503 |
| Volume | Issue number | 151 | 10 |
| Number of pages | 13 |
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| Abstract |
The attenuation of long-wavelength phonons (waves) by glassy disorder plays a central role in various glass anomalies, yet it is neither fully characterized nor fully understood. Of particular importance is the scaling of the attenuation rate Γ(k) with small wavenumbers k → 0 in the thermodynamic limit of macroscopic glasses. Here, we use a combination of theory and extensive computer simulations to show that the macroscopic low-frequency behavior emerges at intermediate frequencies in finite-size glasses, above a recently identified crossover wavenumber k†, where phonons are no longer quantized into bands. For k < k†, finite-size effects dominate Γ(k), which is quantitatively described by a theory of disordered phonon bands. For k > k†, we find that Γ(k) is affected by the number of quasilocalized nonphononic excitations, a generic signature of glasses that feature a universal density of states. In particular, we show that in a frequency range in which this number is small, Γ(k) follows a Rayleigh scattering scaling ∼k-d+1 (-d is the spatial dimension) and that in a frequency range in which this number is sufficiently large, the recently observed generalized-Rayleigh scaling of the form ∼kd+1 log(k0/k) emerges (k0 > k† is a characteristic wavenumber). Our results suggest that macroscopic glasses-A nd, in particular, glasses generated by conventional laboratory quenches that are known to strongly suppress quasilocalized nonphononic excitations-exhibit Rayleigh scaling at the lowest wavenumbers k and a crossover to generalized-Rayleigh scaling at higher k. Some supporting experimental evidence from recent literature is presented. |
| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5111192 |
| Other links | https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85072211789 |
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