# Active acoustic switches using 2D granular crystals

**Authors:** Qikai Wu, Chunyang Cui, Thibault Bertrand, Mark D. Shattuck, and Corey, S. O'Hern

arXiv: 1902.02048 · 2019-06-12

## TL;DR

This paper investigates active acoustic switches made from 2D granular crystals with different grain masses, demonstrating pressure-controlled switching with high gain ratios and fast response times through numerical simulations.

## Contribution

It introduces a novel design of 2D granular crystal-based acoustic switches utilizing pressure and contact breaking mechanisms, optimizing band gaps and switch performance.

## Key findings

- Gain ratio exceeds 10^4 in certain configurations
- Pressure-induced switching outperforms contact breaking in performance
- Hexagonal crystals with 3 knobs form most efficiently, maximizing band gaps

## Abstract

We employ numerical simulations to study active transistor-like switches made from two-dimensional (2D) granular crystals containing two types of grains with the same size, but different masses. We tune the mass contrast and arrangement of the grains to maximize the width of the frequency band gap in the device. The input signal is applied to a single grain on one side of the device, and the output signal is measured from another grain on the other side of the device. Changing the size of one or many grains tunes the pressure, which controls the vibrational response of the device. Switching between the on and off states is achieved using two mechanisms: 1) pressure-induced switching where the interparticle contact network is the same in the on and off states, and 2) switching through contact breaking. In general, the performance of the acoustic switch, as captured by the gain ratio and switching time between the on and off states, is better for pressure-induced switching. We show that in these acoustic switches the gain ratio between the on and off states can be larger than $10^4$ and the switching time (multiplied by the driving frequency) is comparable to that obtained recently for sonic crystals and less than that for photonic transistor-like switches. Since the self-assembly of grains with different masses into 2D granular crystals is challenging, we describe simulations of circular grains with small circular knobs placed symmetrically around the perimeter mixed with circular grains without knobs. Using umbrella sampling techniques, we show that devices with grains with $3$ knobs most efficiently form the hexagonal crystals that yield the largest band gap.

## Full text

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## Figures

23 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.02048/full.md

## References

31 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.02048/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.02048