Broadband nonreciprocal linear acoustics through a non-local active metamaterial

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Abstract

The ability to create linear systems that manifest broadband nonreciprocal wave propagation would provide for exquisite control over acoustic signals for electronic filtering in communication and noise control. Acoustic nonreciprocity has predominately been achieved by approaches that introduce nonlinear interaction, mean-flow biasing, smart skins, and spatio-temporal parametric modulation into the system. Each approach suffers from at least one of the following drawbacks: the introduction of modulation tones, narrow band filtering, and the interruption of mean flow in fluid acoustics. We now show that an acoustic media that is non-local and active provides a new means to break reciprocity in a linear fashion without these deleterious effects. We realize this media using a distributed network of interlaced subwavelength sensor-actuator pairs with unidirectional signal transport. We exploit this new design space to create a stable metamaterial with non-even dispersion relations and electronically tunable nonreciprocal behavior over a broad range of frequencies.

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Sasmal, A., Geib, N., Popa, B. I., Grosh, K., & Grosh, K. (2020). Broadband nonreciprocal linear acoustics through a non-local active metamaterial. New Journal of Physics, 22(6). https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/ab8aad

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