Dynamic effective mass of granular media and the attenuation of structure-borne sound
John Valenza, Chaur-Jian Hsu, Rohit Ingale, Nicolas Gland, Hern\'an A., Makse, and David Linton Johnson

TL;DR
This study investigates how the frequency-dependent effective mass of granular media affects acoustic attenuation in structures, revealing humidity-dependent damping mechanisms and a dynamic Janssen effect through combined experimental and theoretical analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to measure and analyze the elastic and damping properties of granular media affecting structure-borne sound, including humidity effects and wall-borne mass distribution.
Findings
Effective sound speed in granular media is 100-300 m/s.
Damping is dominated by water films at grain contacts, not global viscosity.
Approximately half of the effective mass is borne by cavity walls, showing a dynamic Janssen effect.
Abstract
We report an experimental and theoretical investigation of the frequency-dependent effective mass, , of loose granular particles which occupy a rigid cavity to a given filling fraction, the remaining volume being air of differing humidities. This allow us to study the mechanisms of elastic response and attenuation of acoustic modes in granular media. We demonstrate that this is a sensitive and direct way to measure those properties of the granular medium that are the cause of the changes in acoustic properties of structures containing grain-filled cavities. Specifically, we apply this understanding to the case of the flexural resonances of a rectangular bar with a grain-filled cavity within it. The dominant features of are a sharp resonance and a broad background, which we analyze within the context of simple models. We find that: a) These systems…
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