Active acoustic metamaterials reconfigurable in real-time
Bogdan-Ioan Popa, Durvesh Shinde, Adam Konneker, and Steven A. Cummer

TL;DR
This paper introduces a real-time reconfigurable active acoustic metamaterial that can change its acoustic response digitally without altering its physical structure, enabling versatile applications like imaging and beam steering.
Contribution
The authors present a novel design approach for active metamaterials with fixed structures but digitally reconfigurable acoustic properties, demonstrated through experimental implementations.
Findings
Able to switch between different acoustic functions in real-time
Capable of implementing multiple roles simultaneously
Enhances acoustic imaging beyond diffraction limits
Abstract
A major limitation of current acoustic metamaterials is that their acoustic properties are either locked into place once fabricated or only modestly tunable, tying them to the particular application for which they are designed. We present in this paper a design approach that yields active metamaterials whose physical structure is fixed, yet their local acoustic response can be changed almost arbitrarily and in real-time by configuring the digital electronics that control the metamaterial acoustic properties. We demonstrate experimentally this approach by designing a metamaterial slab configured to act as a very thin acoustic lens that manipulates differently three identical, consecutive pulses incident on the lens. Moreover, we show that the slab can be configured to implement simultaneously various roles, such as that of a lens and beam steering device. Finally, we show that the…
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