Abstract

Bloch mode synthesis (BMS) techniques enable efficient band-structure calculations of periodic media by forming reduced-order models of the unit cell. Rooted in the framework of the Craig–Bampton component mode synthesis methodology, these techniques decompose the unit cell into interior and boundary degrees-of-freedom that are nominally described, respectively, by sets of normal modes and constraint modes. In this paper, we generalize the BMS approach by state-space transformation to extend its applicability to generally damped periodic materials that violate the Caughey–O’Kelly condition for classical damping. In non-classically damped periodic models, the fixed-interface eigenvalue problem may, in general, produce a mixture of underdamped and overdamped modes. We examine two mode-selection schemes for the reduced-order model and demonstrate the underlying accuracy–efficiency trade-offs when qualitatively distinct mixtures of underdamped and overdamped modes are incorporated. The proposed approach provides a highly effective computational tool for analysis of large models of phononic crystals and acoustic/elastic metamaterials with complex damping properties.

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