Flexural wave control via origami-based elastic metamaterials

Author(s):  
Mingkai Zhang ◽  
Jinkyu Yang ◽  
Rui Zhu
2020 ◽  
pp. 107754632094268
Author(s):  
Yinggang Li ◽  
Huan Zi ◽  
Xiong Wu ◽  
Ling Zhu

Sandwich structures are widely used in the fields of aerospace, automobile as well as ship and offshore structures because of their excellent mechanical performances such as lightweight, high specific strength and high specific stiffness. In this study, the flexural wave band gaps and vibration isolation characteristics of sandwich plate-type elastic metamaterials are numerically and experimentally investigated. The proposed sandwich plate-type elastic metamaterials are constituted of local resonant stubs periodically deposited on a sandwich plate with periodic thin-wall aluminium tube cores. An efficient finite element method combined with a solid-shell coupling method and Bloch periodic boundary conditions is presented and validated by experimental measurements to calculate the dispersion relations and the acceleration frequency responses of sandwich plate-type elastic metamaterials. The influences of geometric parameters on the flexural wave band gaps are performed and discussed. Results show that the proposed sandwich plate-type elastic metamaterials can yield flexural wave band gaps in the low-frequency range and show significant performance on the flexural vibration isolation. Moreover, the flexural wave band gaps can be effectively modulated by the geometric parameters.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Yangyang Chen

Over the past two decades, an extensive research effort has been devoted to elastic metamaterials, structured artificial materials at subwavelength scales, for elastic wave manipulations in solids. Due to the extreme values of material parameters, negative and/or positive, they achieved, the applications can range from wave and/or vibration attenuations, wave guiding and imaging, enhanced sensing, to invisible cloaking. However, conventional passive metamaterials have limitations, i.e. they can only be operated in narrow frequency regions and their functions are usually locked into space or with minor tunabilities once fabricated, lacking real time reconfigurabilities. Those limitations strongly hinder them from practical usages. With the rapid development of smart materials and structures, more and more intelligent elements are being introduced into wave propagation, vibration and sound control systems. The piezoelectric shunting technique is one well known method that receives considerable attention. In this dissertation, by leveraging the circuit control concept, both analog and digital, we propose some circuit controlled active/adaptive/hybrid/programmable metamaterials and metasurfaces for unprecedent elastic wave manipulations. Analytical, numerically and experimentally approaches are combined throughout the dissertation to illustrate design concepts, characterize wave propagation properties, and valid the designs. Specifically, active elastic metamaterials with tunable stiffness in local resonators are first designed for tunable wave and/or vibration mitigations. We then extend this concept to achieve super broadband wave attenuations with frequency-dependent stiffness elements. By introducing the variable stiffness elements to the host medium, a hybrid metamaterial is developed for switched ON/OFF wave propagations and broadband negative refractions. Based on a developed approximate transformation method, an active metamaterial is designed and placed on a plate to achieve spatially varying effective mass densities for broadband elastic trajectory control. Finally, a programmable metasurface with ultrathin-thickness is demonstrated for broadband, real-time and multifunctional wavefront manipulations in a plate. The active, adaptive, hybrid, and programmable elastic metamaterials and/or metasurfaces are still in their infant stages. The examples presented in the dissertation are transformable to different length and time scales and could serve as efficient and powerful tools in exploring some unconventional wave phenomenon in solid structures, i.e. by using concepts in quantum mechanics, where passive approaches are significantly limited. The designs could also immediately open new possibilities in elastic wave control devices including, but not limited to structural health monitoring, stealth technology, active noise control, as well as medical instrumentation and imaging.


2021 ◽  
pp. 104162
Author(s):  
Peng Li ◽  
Mingyu Lu ◽  
Zhenghua Qian ◽  
Iren Kuznetsova ◽  
Vladimir Kolesov ◽  
...  

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