A Quantitative Study of Energy Localization Characteristics in Defect-embedded Phononic Crystals
Vinod Ramakrishnan, Kathryn H. Matlack

TL;DR
This paper develops a quantitative method to analyze defect-induced energy localization in phononic crystals, considering multiple characteristics beyond frequency, and demonstrates its application in designing advanced defect-based phononic devices.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic, quantitative approach using a modified perturbed tridiagonal n-Toeplitz method to analyze defect dynamics in phononic crystals, expanding beyond traditional frequency-focused studies.
Findings
Accurately estimates resonance characteristics in 1D and 2D PnC lattices.
Highlights how defect mode features depend on system parameters.
Demonstrates defect modes for virtual grounding and acoustic absorption.
Abstract
Phononic crystals (PnCs) are periodic engineered media that can customize the spatio-temporal characteristics of mechanical energy propagation. PnCs that additionally leverage precisely embedded defects can achieve robust energy localization with desirable spatio-temporal characteristics, opening avenues for critical engineering applications, e.g., energy harvesting, waveguiding, and fluid flow control. Numerous studies have qualitatively explored the localized dynamics via simulations and experiments, investigating the defect resonance frequency as the primary feature. However, the frequency represents only a subset of the relevant characteristics and a systematic approach to quantify the full scope of the defect dynamics remains elusive. This article establishes the frequency, mode shape, and localized velocity (or displacement) amplitude envelope as three significant factors…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic Crystals and Applications
