Widening, Transition and Coalescence of Local Resonance Band Gaps in Multi-resonator Acoustic Metamaterials: From Unit Cells to Finite Chains
A. Stein, M. Nouh, T. Singh

TL;DR
This paper explores multi-resonator acoustic metamaterials to achieve wider and more tunable local resonance band gaps through analytical modeling of their dispersion properties, enabling advanced broadband sound attenuation.
Contribution
It introduces a purely analytical framework for understanding and designing multi-resonator metamaterials with tunable and coalescing band gaps, expanding the capabilities of acoustic metamaterials.
Findings
Band gap widening via parallel resonators
Collapse of acoustic and optic bands in dual-periodic structures
Analytical expressions accurately predict finite chain responses
Abstract
Local resonance band gaps in acoustic metamaterials are widely known for their strong attenuation yet narrow frequency span. The latter limits the practical ability to implement subwavelength band gaps for broadband attenuation and has motivated novel metamaterial designs in recent years. In this paper, we investigate the behavior of acoustic metamaterials where unit cells house multiple resonating elements stacked in different configurations, aimed at instigating a wide array of wave propagation profiles that are otherwise unattainable. The dispersion mechanics of the multi-resonator metamaterials are developed using purely analytical expressions which depict and explain the underlying dynamics of such systems both at the unit cell level as well as the frequency response of their finite realizations. The framework reveals the mechanism behind the transition of the lower and upper band…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAcoustic Wave Phenomena Research · Metamaterials and Metasurfaces Applications · Electromagnetic Simulation and Numerical Methods
