Abstract

Herein, a method for designing and fabricating acoustic metamaterial focusing lenses for imaging applications such as nondestructive testing is proposed. First, a refractive index distribution is designed using the time delay method for a target focal length. Second, unit cell structures that can achieve the required refractive indices are found using the effective property retrieval method. At this point, factors such as fabrication cost and manufacturing limitations are considered. Finally, the pressure field from the designed lens is calculated using finite element (FE) modelling and iterated until the required focusing performance is achieved. To increase manufacturability, the unit cells necessarily become larger than required for the homogeneous regime. As an example, a lens of focal length 200 ± 10 mm at a frequency of 40 kHz is designed using cross‐shaped unit cells and fabricated using three‐dimensional printing. The design methodology leads to 2.4 mm (wavelength/3.6) unit cells which operate near the cut‐off frequency of the first mode. The lens is experimentally tested, achieving a focal length of 208 mm and a focal width of 12 mm (1.4 × wavelength), and showing good agreement with an FE model. The focusing ability of the lens is demonstrated by measuring the size of various holes in thin plates.

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