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Abstract

An impedance-matched surface has the property that an incident wave generates no reflection. Here we demonstrate that by using a simple construction, an acoustically reflecting surface can acquire hybrid resonances and becomes impedance-matched to airborne sound at tunable frequencies, such that no reflection is generated. Each resonant cell of the metasurface is deep-subwavelength in all its spatial dimensions, with its thickness less than the peak absorption wavelength by two orders of magnitude. As there can be no transmission, the impedance-matched acoustic wave is hence either completely absorbed at one or multiple frequencies, or converted into other form(s) of energy, such as an electrical current. A high acoustic-electrical energy conversion efficiency of 23% is achieved.

Details

Title
Acoustic metasurface with hybrid resonances
Author
Ma, Guancong; Yang, Min; Xiao, Songwen; Yang, Zhiyu; Sheng, Ping
Pages
873-8
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Sep 2014
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
14761122
e-ISSN
14764660
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1557632621
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Sep 2014