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Broadband Membrane-Type Acoustic Metamaterial Structures with Polymorphic Anti-Resonance Modes Gissing Tech. Company, Limited

SAE Technical Papers (1906-current) Available online

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Format:
Book
Conference/Event
Author/Creator:
Zhang, Zhang, author.
Contributor:
Huang, Wei
Jiang, Yuying
Tian, Xiujie
Wu, Jiu Hui
Zhou, Guojian
Zhu, Keda
Conference Name:
Noise and Vibration Conference & Exhibition (2019-06-10 : Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States)
Language:
English
Physical Description:
1 online resource cm
Place of Publication:
Warrendale, PA SAE International 2019
Summary:
AbstractThe researches indicate that rational design of membrane-type acoustic metamaterial (MAM) can make it have a high sound transmission loss (STL) at the anti-resonant frequency. Based on the principle of local resonance of acoustic metamaterials, this paper studied the coupling interactions between sound field and vibration modes, and designed four lightweight MAM structural units with different distributed harmonic oscillators, and then the anti-resonant behaviors of different units within the low frequency were gradually analyzed. The regulation mechanism of continuous polymorphic anti-resonance modes on broadening STL bandwidth was further revealed, and the STL characteristics have been verified within the low-frequency range by numerical simulation and experiments. The results show that the design of a single cross-shaped resonator can increase the diversity of anti-resonance modes and eliminate the node-circular-type resonance mode, then ensure the wider STL bandwidth. Furthermore, four metal platelets set symmetrically between the swing arms based on the unit above increase the local anti-resonance modes of the new unit, which greatly expand the STL bandwidth by shifting its upper limit to the right. In addition, the distributed oscillators in the unit have strong anti-resonant behaviors simultaneously, and the incident sound energy is limited to the unit region, thus the STL peak is high
Notes:
Vendor supplied data
Publisher Number:
2019-01-1574
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license

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