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'''Vibrational modes of glasses: The effects of disorder and nonlinearity''' | '''Vibrational modes of glasses: The effects of disorder and nonlinearity''' | ||
A linear chain of | A linear chain of atoms coupled by harmonic springs is a standard model used to introduce various concepts of solid state physics. | ||
[[Image:chain.gif|thumb|center|500px|An illustration of a linear chain of masses with periodic boundary conditions which effectively connect first and last mass by a spring.]] | |||
The ordered linear atomic chain has sinusoidal standing wave ''normal modes'' (if the ends are fixed) or traveling wave normal modes (if the ends are connected in a ring via periodic or, the so-called, Born-Von Karman boundary conditions). Ballistically (i.e., without any scattering) propagating wave packets can be built from these normal modes, and illustrate the mechanism of heat propagation in insulating crystals. When disorder is introduced in the chain, as simulated by random spring constants <math> K_n </math> in the Figure above (or random masses), qualitatively new effects arise: on length scales longer than the localization length, energy is trapped in few atoms unless there are nonlinear forces. | |||
==Part I for both PHYS460 and PHYS660 students== | |||
Consider a chain of <math> L=20000 </math> atoms with ''periodic boundary conditions''. Its harmonic springs are disordered so that <math> K_n = K_0 ( 1+r_n) </math>, where <math> r_n </math> is chosen by a random number generator and is uniformly distributed in the interval <math> (-b,b) </math>, with <math> b=0.3 </math>. To simulate hypothetical linear silicon chain (the silicon atom mass is M), choose <math> K_0 = 10.6 \ \mathrm{eV/\AA^2} </math> which specifies the maximum vibrational frequency <math> \hbar \omega_\mathrm{max} = 2 \sqrt{K_0/M} \approx 80 \ \mathrm{meV} </math> when there is no disorder (i.e., when <math> b=0 </math>). | |||
Using ''exact'' numerical diagonalization of the dynamical matrix, find vibrational frequencies and eigenstates (a system of 20000 atoms should be sufficiently large to ensure that the conclusions are not affected by the finite-size effects). | |||
'''(a)''' From the eigenfrequencies compute the vibrational density of states (DOS) defined as | |||
<math> N(\omega) = \frac{1}{L} \sum_i \delta (\omega - \omega_i) </math> | |||
where the <math> \delta </math>-function is broadened into a box function (i.e., you just have to bin the eigenfrequencies into equally spaced bins in the obtained range of eigenfrequencies, and then divide the final number in each bin by <math> L </math> and the size of the bin itself). Plot DOS for both clean and disordered chain as a function of frequency. | |||
'''(b)''' To understand the difference between propagating and localized modes, compute the participation ratio (which tells us how many atoms participate in the vibration of a particular mode) for an eigenstate <math> e_i(a) </math> : | |||
<math> P_i = \left( \sum_{a=1}^L [e_i(a)]^4 \right)^{-1} </math> | |||
From the plot of <math> P_i </math> vs. <math> \omega_i </math> locate the mobility edge as the frequency where a transition from extended to localized states occurs (roughly where <math> P_i \le 10 </math>). | |||
==Part II for PHYS660 students only== | |||
In addition to (a), perform disorder averaging to obtain average values of quantities introduced in (a) over an ''ensemble'' of chains. Your ensemble should contain at least 10 chains of 20000 atoms with different realizations of its disordered harmonic springs. After you have obtained eigenfrequencies and eigenstates for all of these chains, you have to: create bins on the frequency axis; sum the DOS or participation ratio of different chains falling in the same bin; and, finally, divide those numbers by the number of chains to get arithmetic average values for the DOS and the participation ratio. | |||
==Part III for both PHYS460 and PHYS660 students== | |||
A system of coupled linear harmonic oscillators (i.e., with forces between nearest neighbor particles which depend linearly on the distance between them as in Part I and II above) is ''not ergodic'', since if we put it initially in a normal mode it will stay forever in that normal mode. Fermi, Pasta and Ulam thought that, due to the '''nonlinear forces,''' the energy injected into the lowest frequency mode <math> q=1 </math> should have slowly drifted to the other modes, until the equipartition of energy (as a consequence of ergodicity) would have been reached. The beginning of the calculation indeed suggested that this was the case. Modes <math> q=2 </math>, <math> q=3 </math>, ... were successively excited, reaching a state close to equipartition, as shown in [http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Fermi-Pasta-Ulam_nonlinear_lattice_oscillations Figure 2]. | |||
However, by accident, one day, they let the program run longer. When they realized their oversight and came back to the computer room, they noticed that the system, after remaining in the near equipartition state for a while, had then departed from it. To their great surprise, after 157 periods of the mode <math> q=1 </math>, almost all the energy (all but 3%) was back to this mode. Further calculations, performed later with faster computers, showed that the same phenomenon repeats many times, and that a ''super-recurrence'' exists, at which the initial state is recovered with an even higher accuracy. Therefore, the system behaved in a surprising way: ''contrary to the predictions of statistical mechanics'' when the number of particles <math> L \rightarrow \infty </math>, the energy equipartition state was not reached and energy was periodically returning to the initially excited <math> q=1 </math> normal mode. This highly remarkable result, known as the '''FPU paradox''', shows that ''nonlinearity is not enough to guarantee the equipartition of energy''. | |||
Write a program that solves numerically via the Verlet algorithm coupled equations of motion for the so-called <math> \beta-\mathrm{FPU} </math> model: | |||
<math> \ddot{x}_n = (x_{n+1} - 2x_n + x_{n-1}) + \beta [(x_{n+1}-x_n)^3 -(x_n-x_{n-1})^3] </math> | |||
which describes <math> n=1, \ldots, L=512 </math> particles in a chain with quadratic version of the nonlinear forces between the nearest neighbor particles. The coordinate <math> x_n(t) </math> corresponds to the displacement of the ''n''-th particle from its equilibrium position. The particle mass and harmonic spring constants are assumed to be one. | |||
Choose the fixed boundary conditions <math> x_0 = x_{L+1} = 0 </math>, so that normal modes of the linear chain for <math> \beta=0 </math> are collective motion described by eigenvectors <math> \mathbf{e}_q </math> whose components are: | |||
<math> e^q_n = \sqrt{\frac{2}{L+1}} \sin \left( \frac{\pi q n}{L+1} \right) </math> | |||
which correspond to eigenfrequencies <math> \omega_q = 2\sin [(\pi q)/(2L+2)] </math>. The FPU paradox is generated by choosing initial displacement of the particles in the chain to correspond to the lowest normal mode | |||
<math> q=1 </math> of the linear chain, evolving equations for <math> x_n(t) </math> in the <math> \beta-\mathrm{FPU} </math> model for chosen <math> \beta =0.1 </math>, and finding that the power spectrum (computed by FFT algorithm) of the position of arbitrarily chosen particle, e.g., <math> x_{256}(t) </math> contains only sharp peaks corresponding to frequency of one or few excited normal modes. The simulation time should cover at least 200 periods <math> 2\pi/\omega_q </math> when the dynamical evolution starts in normal mode <math> q </math>. | |||
To push this system into the ergodic behavior (with simulation performed within a reasonable time) you have to repeat the calculation by crossing the so-called threshold of stochasticity for conservative chaotic system. In the <math> \beta-\mathrm{FPU} </math> model, this means that initial positions should be chosen using higher normal mode (e.g., <math> q=300 </math>) and more ''potential'' energy should be pumped into the system initially by increasing the value of the amplitude <math> A </math> of the normal mode used as the initial condition <math> x_n(t=0)=Ae^q_n </math>. | |||
==REFERENCES== | |||
===Vibrational eigenmodes=== | |||
* P. B. Allen and J. Kelner, ''Evolution of a vibrational wave packet on a disordered chain'', Am. J. Phys. '''66''', 497 (1998). [http://math.mit.edu/~kelner/Publications/Docs/KAAJP.pdf [PDF]] | |||
* J. Fabian, ''Decay of localized vibrational states in glasses: A one-dimensional example'', Phys. Rev. B '''55''', R3328 (1997). [http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.55.R3328 [PDF]] | |||
===Fermi-Pasta-Ulam problem=== | |||
*G. P. Berman and F. M. Izrailev, ''The Fermi–Pasta–Ulam problem: Fifty years of progress'', Chaos '''15''', 015104 (2005). [https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1855036 [PDF]] | |||
*S. Flach, M. V. Ivanchenko, O. I. Kanakov, and K. G. Mishagin, ''Periodic orbits, localization in normal mode space, and the Fermi-Pasta-Ulam problem'', Am. J. Phys. '''76''', 453 (2008). [http://dx.doi.org/10.1119/1.2820396 [PDF]]. | |||
*[http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Fermi-Pasta-Ulam_nonlinear_lattice_oscillations Fermi-Pasta-Ulam nonlinear lattice oscillations], T. Dauxois and S. Ruffo (2008), Scholarpedia, 3(8):5538. |
Latest revision as of 07:41, 3 July 2023
Vibrational modes of glasses: The effects of disorder and nonlinearity
A linear chain of atoms coupled by harmonic springs is a standard model used to introduce various concepts of solid state physics.
The ordered linear atomic chain has sinusoidal standing wave normal modes (if the ends are fixed) or traveling wave normal modes (if the ends are connected in a ring via periodic or, the so-called, Born-Von Karman boundary conditions). Ballistically (i.e., without any scattering) propagating wave packets can be built from these normal modes, and illustrate the mechanism of heat propagation in insulating crystals. When disorder is introduced in the chain, as simulated by random spring constants in the Figure above (or random masses), qualitatively new effects arise: on length scales longer than the localization length, energy is trapped in few atoms unless there are nonlinear forces.
Part I for both PHYS460 and PHYS660 students
Consider a chain of atoms with periodic boundary conditions. Its harmonic springs are disordered so that , where is chosen by a random number generator and is uniformly distributed in the interval , with . To simulate hypothetical linear silicon chain (the silicon atom mass is M), choose which specifies the maximum vibrational frequency when there is no disorder (i.e., when ).
Using exact numerical diagonalization of the dynamical matrix, find vibrational frequencies and eigenstates (a system of 20000 atoms should be sufficiently large to ensure that the conclusions are not affected by the finite-size effects).
(a) From the eigenfrequencies compute the vibrational density of states (DOS) defined as
where the -function is broadened into a box function (i.e., you just have to bin the eigenfrequencies into equally spaced bins in the obtained range of eigenfrequencies, and then divide the final number in each bin by and the size of the bin itself). Plot DOS for both clean and disordered chain as a function of frequency.
(b) To understand the difference between propagating and localized modes, compute the participation ratio (which tells us how many atoms participate in the vibration of a particular mode) for an eigenstate :
From the plot of vs. locate the mobility edge as the frequency where a transition from extended to localized states occurs (roughly where ).
Part II for PHYS660 students only
In addition to (a), perform disorder averaging to obtain average values of quantities introduced in (a) over an ensemble of chains. Your ensemble should contain at least 10 chains of 20000 atoms with different realizations of its disordered harmonic springs. After you have obtained eigenfrequencies and eigenstates for all of these chains, you have to: create bins on the frequency axis; sum the DOS or participation ratio of different chains falling in the same bin; and, finally, divide those numbers by the number of chains to get arithmetic average values for the DOS and the participation ratio.
Part III for both PHYS460 and PHYS660 students
A system of coupled linear harmonic oscillators (i.e., with forces between nearest neighbor particles which depend linearly on the distance between them as in Part I and II above) is not ergodic, since if we put it initially in a normal mode it will stay forever in that normal mode. Fermi, Pasta and Ulam thought that, due to the nonlinear forces, the energy injected into the lowest frequency mode should have slowly drifted to the other modes, until the equipartition of energy (as a consequence of ergodicity) would have been reached. The beginning of the calculation indeed suggested that this was the case. Modes , , ... were successively excited, reaching a state close to equipartition, as shown in Figure 2.
However, by accident, one day, they let the program run longer. When they realized their oversight and came back to the computer room, they noticed that the system, after remaining in the near equipartition state for a while, had then departed from it. To their great surprise, after 157 periods of the mode , almost all the energy (all but 3%) was back to this mode. Further calculations, performed later with faster computers, showed that the same phenomenon repeats many times, and that a super-recurrence exists, at which the initial state is recovered with an even higher accuracy. Therefore, the system behaved in a surprising way: contrary to the predictions of statistical mechanics when the number of particles , the energy equipartition state was not reached and energy was periodically returning to the initially excited normal mode. This highly remarkable result, known as the FPU paradox, shows that nonlinearity is not enough to guarantee the equipartition of energy.
Write a program that solves numerically via the Verlet algorithm coupled equations of motion for the so-called model:
which describes particles in a chain with quadratic version of the nonlinear forces between the nearest neighbor particles. The coordinate corresponds to the displacement of the n-th particle from its equilibrium position. The particle mass and harmonic spring constants are assumed to be one.
Choose the fixed boundary conditions , so that normal modes of the linear chain for are collective motion described by eigenvectors whose components are:
which correspond to eigenfrequencies . The FPU paradox is generated by choosing initial displacement of the particles in the chain to correspond to the lowest normal mode
of the linear chain, evolving equations for in the model for chosen , and finding that the power spectrum (computed by FFT algorithm) of the position of arbitrarily chosen particle, e.g., contains only sharp peaks corresponding to frequency of one or few excited normal modes. The simulation time should cover at least 200 periods when the dynamical evolution starts in normal mode .
To push this system into the ergodic behavior (with simulation performed within a reasonable time) you have to repeat the calculation by crossing the so-called threshold of stochasticity for conservative chaotic system. In the model, this means that initial positions should be chosen using higher normal mode (e.g., ) and more potential energy should be pumped into the system initially by increasing the value of the amplitude of the normal mode used as the initial condition .
REFERENCES
Vibrational eigenmodes
- P. B. Allen and J. Kelner, Evolution of a vibrational wave packet on a disordered chain, Am. J. Phys. 66, 497 (1998). [PDF]
- J. Fabian, Decay of localized vibrational states in glasses: A one-dimensional example, Phys. Rev. B 55, R3328 (1997). [PDF]
Fermi-Pasta-Ulam problem
- G. P. Berman and F. M. Izrailev, The Fermi–Pasta–Ulam problem: Fifty years of progress, Chaos 15, 015104 (2005). [PDF]
- S. Flach, M. V. Ivanchenko, O. I. Kanakov, and K. G. Mishagin, Periodic orbits, localization in normal mode space, and the Fermi-Pasta-Ulam problem, Am. J. Phys. 76, 453 (2008). [PDF].
- Fermi-Pasta-Ulam nonlinear lattice oscillations, T. Dauxois and S. Ruffo (2008), Scholarpedia, 3(8):5538.