The vibrational modes of pristine and polycrystalline monolayer colloidal
crystals composed of thermosensitive microgel particles are measured using
video microscopy and covariance matrix analysis. At low frequencies, the Debye
relation for two dimensional harmonic crystals is observed in both crystal
types; at higher frequencies, evidence for van Hove singularities in the phonon
density of states is significantly smeared out by experimental noise and
measurement statistics. The effects of these errors are analyzed using
numerical simulations. We introduce methods to correct for these limitations,
which can be applied to disordered systems as well as crystalline ones, and we
show that application of the error correction procedure to the experimental
data leads to more pronounced van Hove singularities in the pristine crystal.
Finally, quasi-localized low-frequency modes in polycrystalline two-dimensional
colloidal crystals are identified and demonstrated to correlate with structural
defects such as dislocations, suggesting that quasi-localized low-frequency
phonon modes may be used to identify local regions vulnerable to rearrangements
in crystalline as well as amorphous solids.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures 09/11/2013 major revision