4.7 Article

Mass-stiffness substructuring of an elastic metasurface for full transmission beam steering

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE MECHANICS AND PHYSICS OF SOLIDS
Volume 112, Issue -, Pages 577-593

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmps.2017.11.025

Keywords

Elastic metamaterial; Elastic metasurface; Tunable mass/stiffness; Lattice system; Ultrasonic wave transmission

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korean Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning (MSIP) at Seoul National University [2014M3A6B3063711, 2016R1A2B30102311]

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The metasurface concept has a significant potential due to its novel wavefront-shaping functionalities that can be critically useful for ultrasonic and solid wave-based applications. To achieve the desired functionalities, elastic metasurfaces should cover full 2 pi phase shift and also acquire full transmission within subwavelength scale. However, they have not been explored much with respect to the elastic regime, because the intrinsic proportionality of mass-stiffness within the continuum elastic media causes an inevitable trade-off between abrupt phase shift and sufficient transmission. Our goal is to engineer an elastic metasurface that can realize an inverse relation between (amplified) effective mass and (weakened) stiffness in order to satisfy full 2 pi phase shift as well as full transmission. To achieve this goal, we propose a continuum elastic metasurface unit cell that is decomposed into two substructures, namely a mass-tuning substructure with a local dipolar resonator and a stiffness-tuning substructure composed of non-resonant multiply-perforated slits. We demonstrate analytically, numerically, and experimentally that this unique substructured unit cell can satisfy the required phase shift with high transmission. The substructuring enables independent tuning of the elastic properties over a wide range of values. We use a mass-spring model of the proposed continuum unit cell to investigate the working mechanism of the proposed metasurface. With the designed metasurface consisting of substructured unit cells embedded in an aluminum plate, we demonstrate that our meta surface can successfully realize anomalous steering and focusing of in-plane longitudinal ultrasonic beams. The proposed substructuring concept is expected to provide a new principle for the design of general elastic metasurfaces that can be used to efficiently engineer arbitrary wave profiles. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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