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Experimental proof of emergent subharmonic attenuation zones in a nonlinear locally resonant metamaterial

Valentina Zega, Priscilla Brandão Silva, M.G.D. Geers, V.G. Kouznetsova

2020Scientific Reports33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

High-performance locally resonant metamaterials represent the next frontier in materials technology due to their extraordinary properties obtained through materials design, enabling a variety of potential applications. The most exceptional feature of locally resonant metamaterials is the subwavelength size of their unit cells, which allows to overcome the limits in wave focusing, imaging and sound/vibration isolation. To respond to the fast evolution of these artificial materials and the increasing need for advanced and exceptional properties, the emergence of a new mechanism for wave mitigation and control consisting in a nonlinear interaction between propagating and evanescent waves has recently been theoretically demonstrated. Here, we present the experimental proof of this phenomenon: the appearance of a subharmonic transmission attenuation zone due to energy exchange induced by autoparametric resonance. These results pave the path to a new generation of nonlinear locally resonant metamaterials.

Topics & Concepts

MetamaterialAttenuationAcousticsNonlinear systemResonatorPhysicsOpticsComputer scienceQuantum mechanicsAcoustic Wave Phenomena ResearchMetamaterials and Metasurfaces ApplicationsNonlinear Photonic Systems
Experimental proof of emergent subharmonic attenuation zones in a nonlinear locally resonant metamaterial | Litcius