Scientific Reports (Jul 2024)

An adjustable acoustic metamaterial cell using a magnetic membrane for tunable resonance

  • Alicia Gardiner,
  • Roger Domingo-Roca,
  • James F. C. Windmill,
  • Andrew Feeney

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-65819-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Acoustic metamaterials are growing in popularity for sound applications including noise control. Despite this, there remain significant challenges associated with the fabrication of these materials for the sub-100 Hz regime, because acoustic metamaterials for such frequencies typically require sub-mm scale features to control sound waves. Advances in additive manufacturing technologies have provided practical methods for rapid fabrication of acoustic metamaterials. However, there is a relatively high sensitivity of their resonant characteristics to sub-mm deviations in geometry, pushing the limits of additive manufacturing. One way of overcoming this is via active control of device resonance. Here, an acoustic metamaterial cell with adjustable resonance is demonstrated for the sub-100 Hz regime. A functionally superparamagnetic membrane—devised to facilitate the fabrication process by eliminating magnetic poling requirements—is engineered using stereolithography, and its mechanical and acoustic properties are experimentally measured using laser Doppler vibrometry and electret microphone testing, with a mathematical model developed to predict the cell response. It is demonstrated that an adjustable magnetic acoustic metamaterial can be fabricated at ultra-subwavelength dimensions ( $$\le \lambda$$ ≤ λ /77.5), exhibiting adjustable resonance from 88.73 to 86.63 Hz. It is anticipated that this research will drive new innovations in adjustable metamaterials, including wider frequency ranges.

Keywords