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The distribution of forces affects vibrational properties in hard sphere glasses

Authors :
DeGiuli, E.
Lerner, E.
Brito, C.
Wyart, M.
Source :
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 111 (2014), 17054
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

We study theoretically and numerically the elastic properties of hard sphere glasses, and provide a real-space description of their mechanical stability. In contrast to repulsive particles at zero-temperature, we argue that the presence of certain pairs of particles interacting with a small force $f$ soften elastic properties. This softening affects the exponents characterizing elasticity at high pressure, leading to experimentally testable predictions. Denoting $P(f)\sim f^{\theta_e}$ the force distribution of such pairs and $\phi_c$ the packing fraction at which pressure diverges, we predict that (i) the density of states has a low-frequency peak at a scale $\omega^*$, rising up to it as $D(\omega) \sim \omega^{2+a}$, and decaying above $\omega^*$ as $D(\omega)\sim \omega^{-a}$ where $a=(1-\theta_e)/(3+\theta_e)$ and $\omega$ is the frequency, (ii) shear modulus and mean-squared displacement are inversely proportional with $\langle \delta R^2\rangle\sim1/\mu\sim (\phi_c-\phi)^{\kappa} $ where $\kappa=2-2/(3+\theta_e)$, and (iii) continuum elasticity breaks down on a scale $\ell_c \sim1/\sqrt{\delta z}\sim (\phi_c-\phi)^{-b}$ where $b=(1+\theta_e)/(6+2\theta_e)$ and $\delta z=z-2d$, where $z$ is the coordination and $d$ the spatial dimension. We numerically test (i) and provide data supporting that $\theta_e\approx 0.41$ in our bi-disperse system, independently of system preparation in two and three dimensions, leading to $\kappa\approx1.41$, $a \approx 0.17$, and $b\approx 0.21$. Our results for the mean-square displacement are consistent with a recent exact replica computation for $d=\infty$, whereas some observations differ, as rationalized by the present approach.<br />Comment: 5 pages + 4 pages supplementary information

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 111 (2014), 17054
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1402.3834
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1415298111