Breaking the barriers: advances in acoustic functional materials

Author:

Ge Hao1,Yang Min2ORCID,Ma Chu3,Lu Ming-Hui14,Chen Yan-Feng14,Fang Nicholas3,Sheng Ping2

Affiliation:

1. National Laboratory of Solid State Microstructures and Department of Materials Science and Engineering, College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210093, China

2. Department of Physics, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong, China

3. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA

4. Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210093, China

Abstract

Abstract Acoustics is a classical field of study that has witnessed tremendous developments over the past 25 years. Driven by the novel acoustic effects underpinned by phononic crystals with periodic modulation of elastic building blocks in wavelength scale and acoustic metamaterials with localized resonant units in subwavelength scale, researchers in diverse disciplines of physics, mathematics, and engineering have pushed the boundary of possibilities beyond those long held as unbreakable limits. More recently, structure designs guided by the physics of graphene and topological electronic states of matter have further broadened the whole field of acoustic metamaterials by phenomena that reproduce the quantum effects classically. Use of active energy-gain components, directed by the parity–time reversal symmetry principle, has led to some previously unexpected wave characteristics. It is the intention of this review to trace historically these exciting developments, substantiated by brief accounts of the salient milestones. The latter can include, but are not limited to, zero/negative refraction, subwavelength imaging, sound cloaking, total sound absorption, metasurface and phase engineering, Dirac physics and topology-inspired acoustic engineering, non-Hermitian parity–time synthetic active metamaterials, and one-way propagation of sound waves. These developments may underpin the next generation of acoustic materials and devices, and offer new methods for sound manipulation, leading to exciting applications in noise reduction, imaging, sensing and navigation, as well as communications.

Funder

National Key R&D Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province

Hong Kong Government

Naval Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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