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      Deep subwavelength acoustic metamaterial for low-frequency sound absorption

      , , ,
      EPL (Europhysics Letters)
      IOP Publishing

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          Dark acoustic metamaterials as super absorbers for low-frequency sound.

          The attenuation of low-frequency sound has been a challenging task because the intrinsic dissipation of materials is inherently weak in this regime. Here we present a thin-film acoustic metamaterial, comprising an elastic membrane decorated with asymmetric rigid platelets that aims to totally absorb low-frequency airborne sound at selective resonance frequencies ranging from 100-1,000 Hz. Our samples can reach almost unity absorption at frequencies where the relevant sound wavelength in air is three orders of magnitude larger than the membrane thickness. At resonances, the flapping motion of the rigid platelets leads naturally to large elastic curvature energy density at their perimeter regions. As the flapping motions couple only minimally to the radiation modes, the overall energy density in the membrane can be two-to-three orders of magnitude larger than the incident wave energy density at low frequencies, forming in essence an open cavity.
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            Acoustic metasurface with hybrid resonances.

            An impedance-matched surface has the property that an incident wave generates no reflection. Here we demonstrate that by using a simple construction, an acoustically reflecting surface can acquire hybrid resonances and becomes impedance-matched to airborne sound at tunable frequencies, such that no reflection is generated. Each resonant cell of the metasurface is deep-subwavelength in all its spatial dimensions, with its thickness less than the peak absorption wavelength by two orders of magnitude. As there can be no transmission, the impedance-matched acoustic wave is hence either completely absorbed at one or multiple frequencies, or converted into other form(s) of energy, such as an electrical current. A high acoustic-electrical energy conversion efficiency of 23% is achieved.
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              Acoustic metasurface-based perfect absorber with deep subwavelength thickness

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                EPL (Europhysics Letters)
                EPL
                IOP Publishing
                0295-5075
                1286-4854
                May 01 2017
                May 01 2017
                July 27 2017
                : 118
                : 4
                : 44002
                Article
                10.1209/0295-5075/118/44002
                3b8a40d7-a1ab-4c94-8d68-69c9ff107ad1
                © 2017

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