Bending sound around sharp corners without using topological edge states
Routing and guiding acoustic waves around sharp corners without backscattering losses is of great interest in the acoustics community. Sonic crystals have been primarily utilized to design backscattering-immune waveguides. While conventional approaches use defects to guide waves, a considerably more...
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Zusammenfassung: | Routing and guiding acoustic waves around sharp corners without
backscattering losses is of great interest in the acoustics community. Sonic
crystals have been primarily utilized to design backscattering-immune
waveguides. While conventional approaches use defects to guide waves, a
considerably more sophisticated and robust approach was recently developed
based on topological edge states. In this paper, we propose a radically
different theoretical framework based on extremely anisotropic metamaterials
for engineering backscattering-immune waveguides. We theoretically derived the
exact condition for one-way wave propagation in zigzag paths, and identified a
number of key advantages of the current design over topologically protected
waveguides. While the theoretical underpinning is universal and is applicable
to acoustic and electromagnetic waves, the experimental validation was
conducted using spoof surface acoustic waves. The proposed metamaterial could
open up new possibilities for wave manipulation and lead to applications in
on-chip devices and noise control. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1903.05799 |