Theoretical band-gap bounds and coupling sensitivity for a periodic medium with branching resonators
Mary V. Bastawrous, Mahmoud I. Hussein

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework for understanding and bounding the band-gap edges in elastic metamaterials with branching resonators, revealing how coupling parameters influence wave attenuation at specific frequencies.
Contribution
It introduces a general analytical method to determine fundamental bounds on band-gap edges and their sensitivity to coupling in branched periodic media.
Findings
Derived bounds for band-gap edges based on branch dynamics.
Identified the role of coupling parameters in band-gap tuning.
Validated bounds with finite-element simulations.
Abstract
Elastic metamaterials may exhibit band gaps at wavelengths far exceeding feature sizes. This is attributed to local resonances of embedded or branching substructures. In branched configurations, such as a pillared plate, waves propagating in the base medium-e.g., the plate portion-experience attenuation at band-gap frequencies. Considering a simplified lumped-parameter model for a branched medium, we present a theoretical treatment for a periodic unit cell comprising a base mass-spring chain with a multi-degree-of-freedom, mono-coupled branch. Bloch's theorem is applied, combined with a sub-structuring approach where the resonating branch is modelled separately and condensed into its effective dynamic stiffness. Thus, the treatment is generally applicable to an arbitrary branch regardless of its size and properties. We provide an analysis-with guiding graphical illustrations-that yields…
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