The vibrational spectrum of vitreous silica: rigorous decomposition via recursive orthogonal splitting analysis
Nikita S Shcheblanov (MSME, NAVIER UMR 8205), Ana\"el Lema\^itre (NAVIER UMR 8205)

TL;DR
The paper introduces ROSA, a rigorous framework for decomposing vibrational spectra of amorphous solids like vitreous silica into meaningful atomic motion contributions, revealing hierarchical structures and spectral features.
Contribution
ROSA provides a systematic, recursive method to decompose vibrational spectra based on stiffness contrasts, applicable to covalent network glasses.
Findings
Successfully applied ROSA to vitreous silica, revealing hierarchical vibrational subspaces.
Identified that low-frequency rigid-unit rotations are coupled to bending modes.
Captured key spectral features such as the 800 cm-1 peak and high-frequency doublet.
Abstract
Our understanding of vibrations in solids currently rests on concepts and techniques designed for crystals and explicitly relying on periodicity, hence inapplicable to amorphous materials. As a consequence, no established framework enables a systematic decomposition of the vibrational spectrum of amorphous solids into contributions associated with well-defined types of atomic motions. This methodological gap obscures the interpretation of various experimental probes of linear response, based on the measurements of acoustic, thermal, or optical properties. Here, we construct such a framework-Recursive Orthogonal Splitting Analysis (ROSA)-which decomposes the vibrational space by recursive applications of the projection formalism. Each step of the procedure exploits a dominant stiffness contrast to split a vibrational displacement subspace into two weakly coupled orthogonal complements.…
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