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Extreme Spatial Dispersion in Nonlocally Resonant Elastic Metamaterials

Aleksi Bossart, Romain Fleury

2023Physical Review Letters38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

To date, the vast majority of architected materials have leveraged two physical principles to control wave behavior, namely, Bragg interference and local resonances. Here, we describe a third path: structures that accommodate a finite number of delocalized zero-energy modes, leading to anomalous dispersion cones that nucleate from extreme spatial dispersion at 0 Hz. We explain how to design such zero-energy modes in the context of elasticity and show that many of the landmark wave properties of metamaterials can also be induced at an extremely subwavelength scale by the associated anomalous cones, without suffering from the same bandwidth limitations. We then validate our theory through a combination of simulations and experiments. Finally, we present an inverse design method to produce anomalous cones at desired locations in k space.

Topics & Concepts

MetamaterialPhysicsDelocalized electronDispersion (optics)Context (archaeology)Computational physicsIsotropyBandwidth (computing)Classical mechanicsOpticsQuantum mechanicsComputer scienceComputer networkPaleontologyBiologyAcoustic Wave Phenomena ResearchMetamaterials and Metasurfaces ApplicationsNonlinear Photonic Systems
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