Анотація:
We review and concurrently discuss two recent works conducted by us, which apparently give opposite results.
Specifically, we have investigated how extreme thermal histories in glasses can affect their universal properties
at low temperatures, by studying: (i) amber, the fossilized natural resin, which is a glass which has experienced
a hyperaging process for about one hundred million years; and (ii) ultrastable thin-film glasses of
indomethacin. Specific heat Cp measurements in the temperature range 0.07 K < T < 30 K showed that the
amount of two-level systems, assessed from the linear term at the lowest temperatures, was exactly the same for
the pristine hyperaged amber glass as for the subsequently rejuvenated samples, whereas just a modest increase
of the boson-peak height (in Cp/T³) with increasing rejuvenation was observed, related to a corresponding increase
of the Debye coefficient. On the other hand, we have observed an unexpected suppression of the two-level
systems in the ultrastable glass of indomethacin, whereas conventionally prepared thin films of the same material
exhibit the usual linear term in the specific heat below 1 K ascribed to these universal two-level systems in
glasses. By comparing both highly-stable kinds of glass, we conclude that the disappearance of the tunneling
two-level systems in ultrastable thin films of indomethacin may be due to the quasi-2D and anisotropic behavior
of this glass, what could support the idea of a phonon-mediated interaction between two-level systems.