Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8256964 | Wave Motion | 2015 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
An acoustic metamaterial is envisaged as a synthesised phononic material the mechanical behaviour of which is determined by its unit cell. The present study investigates one aspect of mechanical behaviour, namely the band structure, in two-dimensional (2D) anisotropic acoustic metamaterials encompassing locally resonant mass-in-mass units connected by massless springs in a K4 topology. The 2D lattice problem is formulated in the direct space (r-space) and the equations of motion are derived using the principle of least action (Hamilton's principle). Only proportional anisotropy and attenuation-free shock wave propagation have been considered. Floquet-Bloch's principle is applied, therefore a generic unit cell is studied. The unit cell can represent the entire lattice regardless of its position. It is transformed from the direct lattice in r-space onto its reciprocal lattice conjugate in Fourier space (k-space) and point symmetry operations are applied to Wigner-Seitz primitive cell to derive the first irreducible Brillouin Zone (BZ). The edges of the first irreducible Brillouin Zone in the k-space have then been traversed to generate the full band structure. It was found that the phenomenon of frequency filtering exists and the pass and stop bands are extracted. A follow-up parametric study appreciated the degree and direction of influence of each parameter on the band structure.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
A.S. Fallah, Y. Yang, R. Ward, M. Tootkaboni, R. Brambleby, A. Louhghalam, L.A. Louca,