Disordered Solids without Well-Defined Transverse Phonons: The Nature of Hard-Sphere Glasses

Xipeng Wang, Wen Zheng, Lijin Wang, and Ning Xu
Phys. Rev. Lett. 114, 035502 – Published 23 January 2015; Erratum Phys. Rev. Lett. 114, 199902 (2015)
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Abstract

We probe the Ioffe-Regel limits of glasses with repulsions near the zero-temperature jamming transition by calculating the dynamical structure factors. The Ioffe-Regel limit (frequency) is reached when the phonon wavelength is comparable to the mean free path, beyond which phonons are no longer well defined. At zero temperature, the transverse Ioffe-Regel frequency vanishes at the jamming transition with a diverging length, but the longitudinal one does not, which excludes the existence of a diverging length associated with the longitudinal excitations. At low temperatures, the transverse and longitudinal Ioffe-Regel frequencies approach zero at the jamminglike transition and glass transition, respectively. As a consequence, glasses between the glass transition and the jamminglike transition, which are hard-sphere glasses in the low temperature limit, can only carry well-defined longitudinal phonons and have an opposite pressure dependence of the ratio of the shear modulus to the bulk modulus from glasses beyond the jamminglike transition.

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  • Received 1 September 2014

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.114.035502

© 2015 American Physical Society

Erratum

Authors & Affiliations

Xipeng Wang, Wen Zheng, Lijin Wang, and Ning Xu*

  • CAS Key Laboratory of Soft Matter Chemistry, Hefei National Laboratory for Physical Sciences at the Microscale and Department of Physics, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, People’s Republic of China

  • *ningxu@ustc.edu.cn

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Issue

Vol. 114, Iss. 3 — 23 January 2015

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