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AbstractAbstract
[en] The specific heat Cp and other properties of glasses (ranging from amorphous solids to disordered crystals) at low temperatures are well known to be markedly different from those in fully-ordered crystals. For decades, this qualitative, and even quantitative, universal behavior of glasses has been thoroughly studied. However, a clear understanding of its origin and microscopic nature, needless to say, a closed theory, is still lacking. To shed light on this matter, I review the situation in this work, mainly by compiling and discussing measured low temperature Cp data of many glasses and disordered crystals, as well as highlighting a few exceptions to that “universality rule”. Thus, one can see that, in contrast to other low-temperature properties of glasses, the magnitude of the “glassy” Cp excess at low temperature is far from being universal. Even worse, some molecular crystals without a clear sign of disorder exhibit linear coefficients in Cp larger than those found in many amorphous solids, whereas a few of the latter show negligible values. (author)
Record Type
Journal Article
Journal
Fizika Nizkikh Temperatur; ISSN 0132-6414;
; v. 46(2); p. 130-137

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