4.5 Article

Non-reciprocal wave propagation in mechanically-modulated continuous elastic metamaterials

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA
Volume 146, Issue 1, Pages 782-788

Publisher

ACOUSTICAL SOC AMER AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1121/1.5115019

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation EFRI Award [1641078]
  2. postdoctoral fellowship program at Applied Research Laboratories at The University of Texas at Austin

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Acoustic and elastic metamaterials with time- and space-dependent effective material properties have recently received significant attention as a means to induce non-reciprocal wave propagation. Recent analytical models of spring-mass chains have shown that external application of a nonlinear mechanical deformation, when applied on time scales that are slow compared to the characteristic times of propagating linear elastic waves, may induce non-reciprocity via changes in the apparent elastic modulus for perturbations around that deformation. Unfortunately, it is rarely possible to derive analogous analytical models for continuous elastic metamaterials due to complex unit cell geometry. The present work derives and implements a finite element approach to simulate elastic wave propagation in a mechanically-modulated metamaterial. This approach is implemented on a metamaterial supercell to account for the modulation wavelength. The small-on-large approximation is utilized to separate the nonlinear mechanical deformation (the large wave) from superimposed linear elastic waves (the small waves), which are then analyzed via Bloch wave analysis with a Fourier expansion in the harmonics of the modulation frequency. Results on non-reciprocal wave propagation in a negative stiffness chain, a structure exhibiting large stiffness modulations due to the presence of mechanical instabilities, are then shown as a case example. (C) 2019 Acoustical Society of America.

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