Propagative and diffusive regimes of acoustic damping in bulk amorphous material

Abstract

In amorphous solids, a non-negligible part of thermal conductivity results from phonon scattering on the structural disorder. The conversion of acoustic energy into thermal energy is often measured by the Dynamical Structure Factor (DSF) thanks to inelastic neutron or X-Ray scattering. The DSF is used to quantify the dispersion relation of phonons, together with their damping. However, the connection of the dynamical structure factor with dynamical attenuation of wave packets in glasses is still a matter of debate. We focus here on the analysis of wave packets propagation in numerical models of amorphous silicon. We show that the DHO fits (Damped Harmonic Oscillator model) of the dynamical structure factors give a good estimate of the wave packets mean-free path, only below the Ioffe-Regel limit. Above the Ioffe-Regel limit and below the mobility edge, a pure diffusive regime without a definite mean free path is observed. The high-frequency mobility edge is characteristic of a transition to localized vibrations. Below the Ioffe-Regel criterion, a mixed regime is evidenced at intermediate frequencies, with a coexistence of propagative and diffusive wave fronts. The transition between these different regimes is analyzed in details and reveals a complex dynamics for energy transportation, thus raising the question of the correct modeling of thermal transport in amorphous materials.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…