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New J. Phys. 9 (November 2007) 399   doi: 10.1088/1367-2630/9/11/399

Acoustic metamaterials for sound focusing and confinement


Sébastien Guenneau1,2, Alexander Movchan1, Gunnar Pétursson1 and S Anantha Ramakrishna3
1 Department of Mathematical Sciences, Peach Street, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 3BX, UK
2 Institut Fresnel-CNRS (UMR 6133), 13397 Marseille Cedex 20, France
3 Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur 208016, India
E-mail: guenneau@liv.ac.uk

Abstract. We give a theoretical design for a locally resonant two-dimensional cylindrical structure involving a pair of C-shaped voids in an elastic medium which we term as double 'C' resonators (DCRs) and imbedded thin stiff bars, that displays the negative refraction effect in the low frequency regime. DCRs are responsible for a low frequency band gap which hybridizes with a tiny gap associated with the presence of the thin bars. Using an asymptotic analysis, typical working frequencies are given in closed form: DCRs behave as Helmholtz resonators modeled by masses connected to clamped walls by springs on either side, while thin bars behave as a periodic bi-atomic chain of masses connected by springs. The discrete models give an accurate description of the location and width of the stop band in the case of the DCR and the first two dispersion bands for the periodic thin bars. We then combine our asymptotic formulae for arrays of DCR and thin-bars to design a composite structure that displays a negative refraction effect and has a negative phase velocity in a frequency band, and thus behaves in many ways as a negative refractive acoustic medium (NRAM). Finite element computations show that at this frequency, a slab of such NRAM works as a phononic flat superlens whereas two corners of such NRAM sharing a vertex act as an open resonator and can be used to confine sound to a certain extent.

Received 2 March 2007
Published 6 November 2007

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