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Boson-peak-like anomaly caused by transverse phonon softening in strain glass.

Shuai RenHong-Xiang ZongXue-Fei TaoYong-Hao SunBao-An SunDe-Zhen XueXiang-Dong DingWei-Hua Wang
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
Strain glass is a glassy state with frozen ferroelastic/martensitic nanodomains in shape memory alloys, yet its nature remains unclear. Here, we report a glassy feature in strain glass that was thought to be only present in structural glasses. An abnormal hump is observed in strain glass around 10 K upon normalizing the specific heat by cubed temperature, similar to the boson peak in metallic glass. The simulation studies show that this boson-peak-like anomaly is caused by the phonon softening of the non-transforming matrix surrounding martensitic domains, which occurs in a transverse acoustic branch not associated with the martensitic transformation displacements. Therefore, this anomaly neither is a relic of van Hove singularity nor can be explained by other theories relying on structural disorder, while it verifies a recent theoretical model without any assumptions of disorder. This work might provide fresh insights in understanding the nature of glassy states and associated vibrational properties.
Keyphrases
  • deep learning
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • case control
  • neural network