Experimental Demonstration of Underwater Acoustic Scattering Cancellation

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Abstract

We explore an acoustic scattering cancellation shell for buoyant hollow cylinders submersed in a water background. A thin, low-shear, elastic coating is used to cancel the monopole scattering from an air-filled, neutrally buoyant steel shell for all frequencies where the wavelength is larger than the object diameter. By design, the uncoated shell also has an effective density close to the aqueous background, independently canceling its dipole scattering. Due to the significantly reduced monopole and dipole scattering, the compliant coating results in a hollow cylindrical inclusion that is simultaneously impedance and sound speed matched to the water background. We demonstrate the proposed cancellation method with a specific case, using an array of hollow steel cylinders coated with thin silicone rubber shells. These experimental results are matched to finite element modeling predictions, confirming the scattering reduction. Additional calculations explore the optimization of the silicone coating properties. Using this approach, it is found that scattering cross-sections can be reduced by 20dB for all wavelengths up to k 0 a=κα0.85.

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Rohde, C. A., Martin, T. P., Guild, M. D., Layman, C. N., Naify, C. J., Nicholas, M., … Orris, G. J. (2015). Experimental Demonstration of Underwater Acoustic Scattering Cancellation. Scientific Reports, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep13175

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