Cushing Colby W, Wilson Preston S, Haberman Michael R, Shen Chen, Li Junfei, Cummer Steven A, Tan Zheng Jie, Ma Chu, Du Huifeng, Fang Nicholas X
Applied Research Laboratories and Walker Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Texas, Austin, Texas 78713-8029, USA.
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708, USA.
J Acoust Soc Am. 2021 Mar;149(3):1829. doi: 10.1121/10.0003629.
This paper presents a method to characterize the effective properties of inertial acoustic metamaterial unit cells for underwater operation. The method is manifested by a fast and reliable parameter retrieval procedure utilizing both numerical simulations and measurements. The effectiveness of the method was proved to be self-consistent by a metamaterial unit cell composed of aluminum honeycomb panels with soft rubber spacers. Simulated results agree well with the measured responses of this metamaterial in a water-filled resonator tube. A sub-unity density ratio and an anisotropic mass density are simultaneously achieved by the metamaterial unit cell, making it useful in implementations of transformation acoustics. The metamaterial, together with the approach for its characterization, are expected to be useful for underwater acoustic devices.