Subwavelength topological interface modes in a multilayered vibroacoustic metamaterial
Majdi O. Gzal, Joshua R. Tempelman, Kathryn H. Matlack, Alexander F., Vakakis

TL;DR
This paper develops an analytical transfer matrix approach to identify and characterize subwavelength topological interface modes in multilayered vibroacoustic lattices, enabling broadband, multi-frequency control with robustness insights.
Contribution
It introduces a complete analytical framework for predicting and analyzing topological interface states in vibroacoustic phononic lattices, including explicit state location and robustness criteria.
Findings
Topological interface states are confined to specific bandgaps.
The approach provides explicit formulas for state locations.
States are robust against structural variations.
Abstract
We present a systematic and rigorous analytical approach, based on the transfer matrix methodology, to study the existence, evolution, and robustness of subwavelength topological interface states in practical multilayered vibroacoustic phononic lattices. These lattices, composed of membrane-air cavity unit cells, exhibit complex band structures with various bandgaps, including Bragg, band-splitting induced, local resonance, and plasma bandgaps. Focusing on the challenging low-frequency range and assuming axisymmetric modes, we show that topological interface states are confined to Bragg-like band-splitting induced bandgaps. Unlike the Su-Schrieffer-Heeger model, the vibroacoustic lattice exhibits diverse topological phase transitions across infinite bands, enabling broadband, multi-frequency vibroacoustics in the subwavelength regime. We establish three criteria for the existence of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMetamaterials and Metasurfaces Applications · Advanced Antenna and Metasurface Technologies · Antenna Design and Analysis
