Abstract

Utilizing metamaterials or acoustic black holes (ABHs) to control wave propagation and then to realize vibration control and sound radiation attenuation is a hot topic in recent years. However, using elastic metasurfaces that possess similar wave manipulation abilities with metamaterials and ABHs to attenuate sound radiation has not been reported yet. In this paper, a circular total-reflection elastic metasurface (CTREM) composed of subunits with cubic profiles similar with ABHs is proposed to realize vibration isolation and achieve broadband sound radiation attenuation of a plate below the cut-on frequency of the ABH. Compared with the corresponding bare plate and the plate containing a single ABH with a conventional design, the sound radiation efficiencies of the CTREM plate within and outside the vibration isolation band are both substantially attenuated. This phenomenon can be attributed to two distinct mechanisms: the total reflection of flexural waves caused by vibration isolation, and the local resonances of subunits. Analyses of the wavenumber spectra obtained from normal vibration velocities of the CTREM plate, both experimentally and numerically, along with the supersonic intensity patterns, reveal that the confined vibration energies are subsonic components localized within ineffective sound radiation areas. This, in turn, reduces the coupling strength of sound and vibration, thereby significantly attenuating sound radiation efficiency. The proposed CTREM provides a lossless and lightweight method for sound radiation attenuation.

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