Abstract

In amorphous solids, soft vibrational modes derived from normal mode analysis can be utilized to identify the soft particles that are prone to irreversible rearrangements. However, the normal mode analysis approach cannot explain why the spatial distributions of clustered soft particles do not change over time. We define a softness parameter based on the vibrational density of states calculated directly from molecular dynamics simulations with both the harmonic vibrations and anharmonic relaxations being properly captured at finite temperatures. This parameter spontaneously correlates with the real space atomic motions and the dynamics heterogeneity. Using the softness parameter, we show that the softest particles are confined within rigid cages. These particles keep rearranging reversibly without long-range diffusion. The moderately soft particles rearrange irreversibly, and the hard particles mainly participate in vibrations without rearrangement. We also show that the soft particles form locally disordered structures, while the hard particles present strong ordering. These findings confirm the defective nature of soft particles, and provide insights on the nature of softness as the ability to rearrange, but not necessarily irreversibly.

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