Hyperuniform States of Matter
Salvatore Torquato

TL;DR
Hyperuniform states of matter are unique correlated systems with suppressed large-scale density fluctuations, unifying crystals, quasicrystals, and disordered systems, with broad implications across science and engineering.
Contribution
This review introduces the theoretical foundations of hyperuniform states, emphasizing disordered varieties and their formation, properties, and significance across multiple scientific disciplines.
Findings
Hyperuniform systems unify crystals, quasicrystals, and disordered states.
Disordered hyperuniform systems are found in diverse scientific contexts.
These systems exhibit unique physical properties and can be formed via various routes.
Abstract
Hyperuniform states of matter are correlated systems that are characterized by an anomalous suppression of long-wavelength (i.e., large-length-scale) density fluctuations compared to those found in garden-variety disordered systems, such as ordinary fluids and amorphous solids. All perfect crystals, perfect quasicrystals and special disordered systems are hyperuniform. Thus, the hyperuniformity concept enables a unified framework to classify and structurally characterize crystals, quasicrystals and the exotic disordered varieties. While disordered hyperuniform systems were largely unknown in the scientific community over a decade ago, now there is a realization that such systems arise in a host of contexts across the physical, materials, chemical, mathematical, engineering, and biological sciences, including disordered ground states, glass formation, jamming, Coulomb systems, spin…
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