A glass-like behavior in the low-temperature specific heat is a natural property of any real crystal
arXiv:0710.1837
Abstract
We provide a rigorous calculation of the free energy of a non-metallic crystal containing a small concentration of defects. The low-temperature leading contribution is found to be $\propto T^2$. This further gives a linear-in-$T$ low-temperature specific heat as that exhibited by glasses. These results also show that, similarly to what happens in glasses, the long-wavelength spectrum of a nearly perfect crystal does not suffice to determine its low-temperature behavior.
5 pages, 1 figure