An explanation for the glass-like anomaly in the low-temperature specific heat of incommensurate phases
read the original abstract
An explanation for the glass-like anomaly observed in the low-temperature specific heat of incommensurate phases is proposed. The key point of this explanation is the proper account for the phason damping when computing the thermodynamic magnitudes. The low-temperature specific heat of the incommensurate phases is discussed within three possible scenarios for the phason dynamics: no phason gap, static phason gap and a phason gap of dynamical origin. Existing NMR and inelastic scattering data indicate that these scenarios are possible in biphenyl, blue bronze $\rm K_{0.30}MoO_3$ and BCPS respectively. Estimates of the corresponding low-temperature specific heat are in reasonable agreement with the experiments.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.