UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Surface waves from earthquakes, explosions and other human activity can propagate out from an epicenter, wreaking havoc as they go. Controlling such waves could prevent damage and destruction. At much smaller scales, surface wave filtering and manipulation could induce desirable properties in miniature electronic devices. Now, Penn State College of Engineering researchers have used a strategic design approach called the topology optimization method (TOM) to design fabricated, patterned sheets with tunable properties — called metasurfaces — that control surface waves.
Led by Parisa Shokouhi, professor of engineering science and mechanics, the team published its results in JASA Express Letters, a journal of the Acoustical Society of America.
“Our multidisciplinary team designed a metasurface barrier made up of resonating — or vibrating — structures to stop plate waves from propagating into a specific area,” Shokouhi said.
Surface waves are long-range and can travel far without losing much energy, but the metasurface barrier’s resonating structures can interrupt them.
“Control of guided waves has applications across length scales from surface acoustic wave devices — used in electronics and non-destructive evaluation and structural health monitoring, such as inspecting pipelines — to seismic barriers," Shokouhi said.
The resonating structures in this barrier are tuned to a specific frequency, matching the predefined target frequency of surface waves propagating across an aluminum plate. According to Shokouhi, the researchers formulated their design methodology as a topology optimization problem, using TOM. Aimed at generating a bandgap — a zone without propagation — around a specific frequency, the topology optimization method automatically designs resonators that are optimally shaped to have certain resonance and antiresonance characteristics. This results in what Shokouhi called locally resonant elastodynamic metasurfaces.