Deepening subwavelength acoustic resonance via metamaterials with universal broadband elliptical microstructure
William D. Rowley, William J. Parnell, I. David Abrahams, S. Ruth, Voisey, John Lamb, Nicolas Etaix

TL;DR
This paper introduces a broadband elliptical microstructure that significantly reduces the effective sound speed and size of resonators while maintaining impedance match, enabling improved low-frequency acoustic wave control.
Contribution
The work presents a novel elliptical microstructure design that achieves broadband slow sound with impedance matching, enhancing low-frequency acoustic device performance.
Findings
Halves effective sound speed over a wide low-frequency range
Reduces quarter-wavelength resonator size by 50%
Maintains near impedance match to air
Abstract
Slow sound is a frequently exploited phenomenon that metamaterials can induce in order to permit wave energy compression, redirection, imaging, sound absorption and other special functionalities. Generally however such slow sound structures have a poor impedance match to air, particularly at low frequencies, and consequently exhibit strong transmission only in narrow frequency ranges. This therefore strongly restricts their application in wave manipulation devices. In this work we design a slow sound medium that halves the effective speed of sound in air over a wide range of low frequencies, whilst simultaneously maintaining a near impedance match to air. This is achieved with a rectangular array of cylinders of elliptical cross section, a microstructure that is motivated by combining transformation acoustics with homogenization. Microstructural parameters are optimised in order to…
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