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      The Influence of Additive Manufacturing Processes on the Performance of a Periodic Acoustic Metamaterial

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          Abstract

          Advancements in 3D print technology now allow the printing of structured acoustic absorbent materials at the appropriate microscopic scale and sample sizes. The repeatability of the fundamental cell unit of these metamaterials provides a pathway for the development of viable macro models to simulate built-up structures based on detailed models of the individual cell units; however, verification of such models on actual manufactured structures presents a challenge. In this paper, a design concept for an acoustic benchmark metamaterial consisting of an interlinked network of resonant chambers is considered. The form chosen is periodic with cubes incorporating spherical internal cavities connected through cylindrical openings on each face of the cube. This design is amenable to both numerical modelling and manufacture through additive techniques whilst yielding interesting acoustic behaviour. The paper reports on the design, manufacture, modelling, and experimental validation of these benchmark structures. The behaviour of the acoustic metamaterial manufactured through three different polymer-based printing technologies is investigated with reference to the numerical models and a metal powder-based print technology. At the scale of this microstructure, it can be seen that deviations in surface roughness and dimensional fidelity have a comparable impact on the experimentally measured values of the absorption coefficient.

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          Direct selective laser sintering of metals

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            Optimal sound-absorbing structures

            Absorption by design, with minimal sample thickness allowed by the law of nature, can now be realized by using a design recipe that incorporates the causal constraint of acoustic response as a crucial element. The causal nature of the acoustic response dictates an inequality that relates the two most important aspects of sound absorption: the absorption spectrum and the sample thickness. We use the causality constraint to delineate what is ultimately possible for sound absorbing structures, and denote those which can attain near-equality for the causality constraint to be “optimal.” Anchored by the causality relation, a design strategy is presented for realizing structures with target-set absorption spectra and a sample thickness close to the minimum value as dictated by causality. By using this approach, we have realized a 10.86 cm-thick structure that exhibits a broadband, near-perfect flat absorption spectrum starting at around 400 Hz, while the minimum sample thickness from the causality constraint is 10.36 cm. To illustrate the versatility of the approach, two additional optimal structures with different target absorption spectra are presented. This “absorption by design” strategy would enable the tailoring of customized solutions to difficult room acoustic and noise remediation problems.
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              Propagation of Sound in Porous Media

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                International Journal of Polymer Science
                International Journal of Polymer Science
                Hindawi Limited
                1687-9422
                1687-9430
                July 24 2019
                July 24 2019
                : 2019
                : 1-11
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Mechanical Engineering, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
                Article
                10.1155/2019/7029143
                73bcea36-906a-4e77-967a-a37329ba1aad
                © 2019

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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