Low-Frequency Elastic Wave Focusing and Harvesting via Locally Resonant Metamaterials

Author(s):  
Serife Tol ◽  
F. Levent Degertekin ◽  
Alper Erturk

Elastic lens and mirror concepts that have been explored to date for enhanced structure-borne wave energy harvesting are suitable for relatively high-frequency waves (e.g. tens of kHz), which are very much outside the typical ambient structural frequency energy spectrum. One direct way of reducing the design frequency of such phononic crystal-based lens and reflector/mirror designs is to increase their size, which would yield very large dimensions to operate at ambient vibration frequencies (∼hundreds of Hz). In this work, we exploit locally resonant (LR) metamaterials to enable low-frequency elastic wave focusing via LR lens and mirror concepts with practical size limitations. LR lens is designed in a similar way to its phononic crystal counterpart by tailoring the refractive index profile of the LR unit cell distribution. However, LR approach enables altering the dispersion characteristics, and thereby the phase velocity distribution, at much lower frequencies right below the local resonance frequency. Other than the local resonance frequency of the unit cells, the key factor in design is the mass ratio of the resonators to achieve a desired refractive index profile and focusing. LR mirror uses the low-frequency bandgap which is right above the resonance frequency of the unit cells. LR unit cells arranged in the form of a parabola, for instance, makes a low-frequency LR mirror that operates in the bandgap for plane wave focusing. These LR focusing concepts can be used in vibration civil, aerospace, and mechanical systems to localize and harvest structure-borne wave energy.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emeline Sadoulet-Reboul ◽  
Gaël Matten ◽  
Kaijun Yi ◽  
Morvan Ouisse

Elastic guided wave focusing is of great interest for applications such as vibroacoustic control, energy harvesting, or Structural Health Monitoring. Different strategies allow generation of this effect, GRadient-INdex devices in particular exploit medium with varying properties such as thickness to reproduce an adequate refractive index profile as in optics. The resulting continuous profiles have a curved geometry that can be hard to manufacture, and be difficult to integrate in a given design. The purpose of this paper is to propose a discrete design for a GRIN lens. It is composed of segments selected in number and thickness to give similar focusing effects as a continuous lens profile. The identified configuration is manufactured and bounded on an aluminium plate to evaluate the effective focusing performances. Numerical and experimental vibrometry results confirm that the proposed lens exhibits a fixed focal point over a broad frequency range. The discrete design overcomes fabrication issues encountered in continuous design, allowing for an easier integration in devices for elastic wave control.


2020 ◽  
Vol 143 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiawen Xu ◽  
Guobiao Hu ◽  
Lihua Tang ◽  
Yumin Zhang ◽  
Ruqiang Yan

Abstract Phononic crystals and metamaterials have attractive potential in elastic wave attenuation and guiding over specific frequency ranges. Different from traditional phononic crystals/metamaterials consisting of identical unit cells, a phononic crystal with coupled lanes is reported in this article for enhanced elastic wave attenuation in the low-frequency regime. The proposed phononic crystal takes advantages of destructive interference mechanism. A finitely length phononic crystal plate consisting of coupled lanes is considered for conceptual verification. The coupled lanes are designed to split the incident elastic wave into separated parts with a phase difference to produce destructive interference. Theoretical modeling and finite element method (FEM) analysis are presented. It is illustrated that significant elastic wave attenuation is realized when the phase difference of elastic waves propagating through the coupled lanes approximates π. Besides, multiple valleys in the transmission can be achieved in a broad frequency range with one at a frequency as low as 1.85 kHz with unit cells’ width and length of 25 mm and ten unit cells in one lane.


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 1282
Author(s):  
Victor Reshetnyak ◽  
Igor Pinkevych ◽  
Timothy Bunning ◽  
Dean Evans

This study theoretically investigated light reflection and transmission in a system composed of a thin metal layer (Ag) adjacent to a rugate filter (RF) having a harmonic refractive index profile. Narrow dips in reflectance and peaks in transmittance in the RF band gap were obtained due to the excitation of a Tamm plasmon polariton (TPP) at the Ag–RF interface. It is shown that the spectral position and magnitude of the TPP dips/peaks in the RF band gap depend on the harmonic profile parameters of the RF refractive index, the metal layer thickness, and the external medium refractive index. The obtained dependences for reflectance and transmittance allow selecting parameters of the system which can be optimized for various applications.


1975 ◽  
Vol 26 (10) ◽  
pp. 574-575 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. E. Marhic ◽  
P. S. Ho ◽  
M. Epstein

2001 ◽  
Vol 10 (02) ◽  
pp. 169-179
Author(s):  
HENRI P. URANUS ◽  
M. O. TJIA

A method is proposed for the reconstruction of refractive index profile of planar waveguide from its fundamental mode intensity profile. The reconstruction is performed by fitting the calculated intensity distribution iteratively with the measured intensity distribution employing nonlinear least-squares regression technique. At each stage of iteration, new trial parameter values are generated and used to form a waveguide model approximated by a multilayer structure with stepwise index distribution, upon which the intensity distribution is then calculated by using the characteristic matrix technique. This method was numerically examined by using samples of either known or unknown analytic expression of the index profile.


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