Abstract

The Fano resonance is a widespread wave-scattering phenomenon associated with an ultrasharp line shape, which just serves a narrow working frequency range around the interference frequency, rendering the realization of Fano-based applications extremely challenging. Here, we present and experimentally verify a mechanism of acoustic consecutive Fano resonances (ACFRs) with a symmetric profile for broadband sound attenuation, and extend to a practical implementation of a tunable low-frequency double-helix metasilencer. Based on the ACFRs' dependence on material parameters in the bilayer metamaterial model, we employ an inverse design using Bayesian machine learning to search the optimal broadband insulating performance with a rapid convergence speed (15 iterations). For practical requirement, we extend the ACFRs' prototype to a continuously tunable double-helix metastructure for broadband low-frequency sound attenuation. This broadband effect can be interpreted by the dual-band single-negativity property. A good agreement between numerical simulation and experiment evidences the effectiveness of the proposed metasilencer with tunable sound attenuation (>90%) in 425--865 Hz and high ventilation (>80%) at various double-helix combinations. Our proposed ACFRs' mechanism and its associated metastructure would open routes to promising acoustic metamaterial-based applications, such as filtering, switching, and sensing, and beyond.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call