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In glass, starting from a dependence of the Angells fragility on the Poisson ratio [V. N. Novikov and A. P. Sokolov, Nature 431, 961 (2004)], and a dependence of the Poisson ratio on the atomic packing density [G. N. Greaves et al., Nat. Mater. 10, 823 (2011)], we propose that the heterogeneities are predominantly density fluctuations in strong glasses (lower Poisson ratio) and shear elasticity fluctuations in fragile glasses (higher Poisson ratio). Because the excess of low-frequency vibration modes in comparison with the Debye regime (boson peak) is strongly connected to these fluctuations, we propose that they are breathing-like (with change of volume) in strong glasses and shear-like (without change of volume) in fragile glasses. As a verification, it is confirmed that the excess modes in the strong silica glass are predominantly breathing-like. Moreover, it is shown that the excess breathing-like modes in a strong polymeric glass are replaced by shear-like modes under hydrostatic pressure as the glass becomes more compact.
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.
We numerically study the evolution of the vibrational density of states $D(omega)$ of zero-temperature glasses when their kinetic stability is varied over an extremely broad range, ranging from poorly annealed glasses obtained by instantaneous quench
We conduct experiments on two-dimensional packings of colloidal thermosensitive hydrogel particles whose packing fraction can be tuned above the jamming transition by varying the temperature. By measuring displacement correlations between particles,
We show that a {em vibrational instability} of the spectrum of weakly interacting quasi-local harmonic modes creates the maximum in the inelastic scattering intensity in glasses, the Boson peak. The instability, limited by anharmonicity, causes a com
Numerical simulation is employed to study dynamical heterogeneities in model harmonic glasses whose atoms interact via three variants of the Lennard-Jones potential (monoatomic full Lennard-Jones, soft spheres, binary mixture). Heterogeneities are ob