Inversion symmetric vs. asymmetric excitations and the low-temperature universal properties of Ar:N2 and Ar:N2:CO glasses
The bias energies of various two-level systems (TLSs) and their strengths of interactions with the strain are calculated for Ar:N2 glass. Unlike the case in KBr:CN, a distinct class of TLSs having weak interaction with the strain and untypically small bias energies is not found. The addition of CO m...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Europhysics letters 2015-03, Vol.109 (5), p.56001 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The bias energies of various two-level systems (TLSs) and their strengths of interactions with the strain are calculated for Ar:N2 glass. Unlike the case in KBr:CN, a distinct class of TLSs having weak interaction with the strain and untypically small bias energies is not found. The addition of CO molecules introduces CO flips which form such a class of weakly interacting TLSs, albeit at much lower coupling than that at which they are typically observed in solids. We conclude that because of the absence of a distinct class of weakly interacting TLSs, Ar:N2 is a non-universal glass, the first such system in three dimensions and in ambient pressure. Our results further suggest that Ar:N2:CO may show universal properties, but at temperatures lower than , much smaller than the typical temperature associated with universality, because of the untypical softness of this system. Our results thus shed light on two long-standing questions regarding the low-temperature properties of glasses: the necessary and sufficient conditions for quantitative universality of phonon attenuation, and what dictates the energy scale of 3 K below which universality is typically observed. |
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ISSN: | 0295-5075 1286-4854 |
DOI: | 10.1209/0295-5075/109/56001 |