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      Optimal sound-absorbing structures

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          Abstract

          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.

          Abstract

          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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          Most cited references44

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          Locally resonant sonic materials

          Liu, Zhang, Mao (2000)
          We have fabricated sonic crystals, based on the idea of localized resonant structures, that exhibit spectral gaps with a lattice constant two orders of magnitude smaller than the relevant wavelength. Disordered composites made from such localized resonant structures behave as a material with effective negative elastic constants and a total wave reflector within certain tunable sonic frequency ranges. A 2-centimeter slab of this composite material is shown to break the conventional mass-density law of sound transmission by one or more orders of magnitude at 400 hertz.
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            Ultrasonic metamaterials with negative modulus.

            The emergence of artificially designed subwavelength electromagnetic materials, denoted metamaterials, has significantly broadened the range of material responses found in nature. However, the acoustic analogue to electromagnetic metamaterials has, so far, not been investigated. We report a new class of ultrasonic metamaterials consisting of an array of subwavelength Helmholtz resonators with designed acoustic inductance and capacitance. These materials have an effective dynamic modulus with negative values near the resonance frequency. As a result, these ultrasonic metamaterials can convey acoustic waves with a group velocity antiparallel to phase velocity, as observed experimentally. On the basis of homogenized-media theory, we calculated the dispersion and transmission, which agrees well with experiments near 30 kHz. As the negative dynamic modulus leads to a richness of surface states with very large wavevectors, this new class of acoustic metamaterials may offer interesting applications, such as acoustic negative refraction and superlensing below the diffraction limit.
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              Controlling sound with acoustic metamaterials

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                MHAOAL
                Materials Horizons
                Mater. Horiz.
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                2051-6347
                2051-6355
                2017
                2017
                : 4
                : 4
                : 673-680
                Article
                10.1039/C7MH00129K
                0bddcfbd-75c2-416e-95ab-e74bf87cf441
                © 2017
                History

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