Low-Frequency Broadband Acoustic Metasurface Absorbing Panels

A broadband sound absorption attained by a deep-subwavelength structure is of great interest to the noise control community especially for extremely low frequencies (20–100 Hz) in room acoustics. Coupling multiple different resonant unit cells has been an effective strategy to achieve a broadband so...

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Main Authors: Jun Ji, Dongting Li, Yong Li, Yun Jing
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmech.2020.586249/full
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spelling doaj-bd4ba93b997c4322aae4dfab48a348b82020-11-25T04:08:04ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering2297-30792020-11-01610.3389/fmech.2020.586249586249Low-Frequency Broadband Acoustic Metasurface Absorbing PanelsJun Ji0Dongting Li1Yong Li2Yun Jing3Yun Jing4Graduate Program in Acoustics, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, United StatesInstitute of Acoustics, School of Physics Science and Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai, ChinaInstitute of Acoustics, School of Physics Science and Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai, ChinaGraduate Program in Acoustics, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, United StatesDepartment of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, United StatesA broadband sound absorption attained by a deep-subwavelength structure is of great interest to the noise control community especially for extremely low frequencies (20–100 Hz) in room acoustics. Coupling multiple different resonant unit cells has been an effective strategy to achieve a broadband sound absorption. In this paper, we report on an analytical, numerical and experimental study of a low-frequency broadband (50–63 Hz, one third octave band), high absorption (average absorption coefficient ≈93%), near-omnidirectional (0–75°) acoustic metasurface absorber composed of four coupled unit cells at a thickness of 15.4 cm (1/45 of the wavelength at 50 Hz). To further broaden the bandwidth (50–100 Hz, one octave band), a design with 19 unit cells coupled in a supercell is analytically studied to achieve an average absorption coefficient of 85% for a wide angle range (0–75°) at a thickness of 20 cm (1/34 of wavelength at 50 Hz). Two additional degrees of freedom, the lateral size of supercell and the number of unit cells in the supercell, are demonstrated to facilitate such a causally optimal design which is close to the ideally causal optimality. The proposed design methodology may solve the long-standing issue for low frequency absorption in room acoustics.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmech.2020.586249/fulllow-frequency sound absorptionbroad bandwidthdeep-subwavelength thicknessfar-field coupling effectcausal optimality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jun Ji
Dongting Li
Yong Li
Yun Jing
Yun Jing
spellingShingle Jun Ji
Dongting Li
Yong Li
Yun Jing
Yun Jing
Low-Frequency Broadband Acoustic Metasurface Absorbing Panels
Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering
low-frequency sound absorption
broad bandwidth
deep-subwavelength thickness
far-field coupling effect
causal optimality
author_facet Jun Ji
Dongting Li
Yong Li
Yun Jing
Yun Jing
author_sort Jun Ji
title Low-Frequency Broadband Acoustic Metasurface Absorbing Panels
title_short Low-Frequency Broadband Acoustic Metasurface Absorbing Panels
title_full Low-Frequency Broadband Acoustic Metasurface Absorbing Panels
title_fullStr Low-Frequency Broadband Acoustic Metasurface Absorbing Panels
title_full_unstemmed Low-Frequency Broadband Acoustic Metasurface Absorbing Panels
title_sort low-frequency broadband acoustic metasurface absorbing panels
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering
issn 2297-3079
publishDate 2020-11-01
description A broadband sound absorption attained by a deep-subwavelength structure is of great interest to the noise control community especially for extremely low frequencies (20–100 Hz) in room acoustics. Coupling multiple different resonant unit cells has been an effective strategy to achieve a broadband sound absorption. In this paper, we report on an analytical, numerical and experimental study of a low-frequency broadband (50–63 Hz, one third octave band), high absorption (average absorption coefficient ≈93%), near-omnidirectional (0–75°) acoustic metasurface absorber composed of four coupled unit cells at a thickness of 15.4 cm (1/45 of the wavelength at 50 Hz). To further broaden the bandwidth (50–100 Hz, one octave band), a design with 19 unit cells coupled in a supercell is analytically studied to achieve an average absorption coefficient of 85% for a wide angle range (0–75°) at a thickness of 20 cm (1/34 of wavelength at 50 Hz). Two additional degrees of freedom, the lateral size of supercell and the number of unit cells in the supercell, are demonstrated to facilitate such a causally optimal design which is close to the ideally causal optimality. The proposed design methodology may solve the long-standing issue for low frequency absorption in room acoustics.
topic low-frequency sound absorption
broad bandwidth
deep-subwavelength thickness
far-field coupling effect
causal optimality
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmech.2020.586249/full
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AT yongli lowfrequencybroadbandacousticmetasurfaceabsorbingpanels
AT yunjing lowfrequencybroadbandacousticmetasurfaceabsorbingpanels
AT yunjing lowfrequencybroadbandacousticmetasurfaceabsorbingpanels
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