Visco-thermal effects in acoustic metamaterials: From total transmission to total reflection and high absorption

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Abstract

We theoretically and experimentally investigate visco-thermal effects on the acoustic propagation through metamaterials consisting of rigid slabs with subwavelength slits embedded in air. We demonstrate that this unavoidable loss mechanism is not merely a refinement, but that it plays a dominant role in the actual acoustic response of the structure. Specifically, in the case of very narrow slits, the visco-thermal losses avoid completely the excitation of Fabry-Perot resonances, leading to 100% reflection. This is exactly opposite to the perfect transmission predicted in the idealised lossless case. Moreover, for a wide range of geometrical parameters, there exists an optimum slit width at which the energy dissipated in the structure can be as high as 50%. This work provides a clear evidence that visco-thermal effects are necessary to describe realistically the acoustic response of locally resonant metamaterials.

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Molerón, M., Serra-Garcia, M., & Daraio, C. (2016). Visco-thermal effects in acoustic metamaterials: From total transmission to total reflection and high absorption. New Journal of Physics, 18(3). https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/18/3/033003

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