Phononic Crystals: Artificial Crystals for Sonic, Acoustic, and Elastic Waves

Author:   Vincent Laude
Publisher:   De Gruyter
Edition:   Digital original
Volume:   26
ISBN:  

9783110302653


Pages:   419
Publication Date:   28 August 2015
Recommended Age:   College Graduate Student
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Phononic Crystals: Artificial Crystals for Sonic, Acoustic, and Elastic Waves


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Overview

Phononic crystals are artificial periodic structures that can alter efficiently the flow of sound, acoustic waves, or elastic waves. They were introduced about twenty years ago and have gained increasing interest since then, both because of their amazing physical properties and because of their potential applications. The topic of phononic crystals stands as the cross-road of physics (condensed matter physics, wave propagation in inhomogeneous and periodic media) and engineering (acoustics, ultrasonics, mechanical engineering, electrical engineering). Phononic crystals cover a wide range of scales, from meter-size periodic structures for sound in air to nanometer-size structures for information processing or thermal phonon control in integrated circuits. Phononic crystals have a definite relation with the topic of photonic crystals in optics. The marriage of phononic and photonic crystals also provides a promising structural basis for enhanced sound and light interaction. As the topic is getting popular, it is nowadays presented and discussed at various international conferences. After the first ten years during which the topic has remained mainly theoretical with a few proof-of-concept demonstrations in the literature, the evolution has been towards applications, instrumentation, and novel designs. The physical explanations for various effects are now well understood and efficient numerical methods and analysis tools have been developed. The book contains a comprehensive set of finite element model (FEM) scripts for solving basic phononic crystal problems. The scripts are short, easy to read, and efficient, allowing the reader to generate for him(her)self band structures for 2D and 3D phononic crystals, to compute Bloch waves, waveguide and cavity modes, and more.

Full Product Details

Author:   Vincent Laude
Publisher:   De Gruyter
Imprint:   De Gruyter
Edition:   Digital original
Volume:   26
Weight:   0.820kg
ISBN:  

9783110302653


ISBN 10:   3110302659
Pages:   419
Publication Date:   28 August 2015
Recommended Age:   College Graduate Student
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

1 Introduction [6 p.] Description and purpose of the book. Introduction of some elementary concepts. History of the phononic crystal concept. 2 Waves in periodic media [40 p.] A presentation of waves in periodic media devoid of complications like polarization, anisotropy, tensors, loss, etc. Self-contained presentation for scalar waves. 2.1 Bloch theorem Scalar wave theory. Scalar Helmholtz equation. Bloch theorem. 2.2 Physical origin of band gaps 1D periodic media. Scattering and diffraction. Bragg band gaps. Local and Fano resonances. 2.3 Brillouin zone Definition. Direct and reciprocal lattice. 2.4 The band structure Fourier transforms. Wave vectors. Band structure. Dispersion, group velocity. Equifrequency contours. Analogy with phonons in atomic lattices. 2.5 Appendix: Brillouin zones for 2D and 3D lattices Geometrical description of the most common lattices. 3 Acoustic waves [20 p.] A synthetic presentation of the subject, with reference to other basic books. 3.1 Dynamic equations Particle velocity and pressure. Acoustic equations. 3.2 Constants of fluids Constants for fluids. Determination of bulk velocities. 3.3 Loss and viscosity Representation of propagation loss in fluids. Modifications of equations (complex material constants). 3.4 Reflection and refraction Brief review of reflection and refraction at the interface of 2 media. Fresnel formulas. 4 Sonic crystals [50 p.] Introduce sonic crystals (that can be described by pressure waves), with accent on finite element modeling and basic properties.4.1 Modeling of sonic crystals 4.1.1 Analysis via plane wave expansion (PWE) 4.1.2 Multiple scattering theory (MST and LMS) 4.1.3 Finite element modeling (FEM) 4.2 2D sonic crystal Steel cylinders in air. Steel cylinders in water. Measurement techniques. Comparison with experiment. Deaf bands. 4.3 3D sonic crystals Steel beads in water. 4.4 Tutorial: sonic crystal analysis with FEM Generation of band structures. Plotting Bloch waves. Worked examples with ff++. 4.5 Appendix: Weak form modeling of sonic crystals. Lagrange Finite elements. Bloch waves and FEM. 5 Elastic waves [40 p.] A synthetic presentation of the subject, with reference to other basic books, plus an original part on FEM modeling. 5.1 Dynamic equations Strain and Stress. Elastic constants. Elastodynamic equations. 5.2 Christoffel equation for bulk waves Anisotropy of wave propagation in crystalline solids. Slowness curve. Wave surface. Polarization. Group velocity. Poynting theorem and energy conservation. 5.3 Piezoelectric media Description of the effect. Generalization of the concepts of the previous section. 5.4 Plate waves Lamb and other plate waves. Dispersion diagram. 5.5 Surface waves Rayleigh and other surface waves. Radiation and leakage. Slowness curves for SAW. 5.6 Tutorial: modeling plate waves with FEM 5.7 Appendix: tensors 6 Phononic crystals for bulk waves [50 p.] 6.1 Modeling of phononic crystals 6.1.1 Analysis via plane wave expansion (PWE) 6.1.2 Finite element modeling (FEM) 6.2 2D phononic crystal Holey and solid-solid PC, for most common material combinations. Comparison with experiments. 6.3 3D phononic crystals Steel beads in epoxy. Comparison with experiments. 6.4 Tutorial: phononic crystal analysis with FEM Generation of band structures. Plotting Bloch waves. Worked examples with ff++.6.5 Appendix: weak form modeling of phononic crystals 7 Phononic crystals for surface and plate waves [40 p.] 7.1 Modeling Presentation based on PWE and/or FEM. Surface boundary conditions and determinants. 7.2 Phononic plates Specific properties and discussion of various forms. Preferred example: holey silicon plate. 7.3 Surface phononic crystals Specific properties and discussion of various forms. Preferred examples: holey silicon and lithium niobate. The sound cone and leakage. 7.4 Measurement methods Electrical transduction. Optical transduction. Optical measurement of surface displacements. Comparison with experiments. 7.5 Tutorial: phononic plates and surface waves with FEM 8 Coupling of acoustic and elastic waves in phononic crystals [20 p.] 8.1 Phononic crystal of solid inclusions in fluid 8.2 Phononic plates in water and air 8.3 Corrugated surfaces and plates Scholte-Stoneley wave. Conversion of bulk to surface waves. 9 Evanescent Bloch waves [30 p.] 9.1 Theory P.E and FEM 9.2 Sonic crystals Complex band structure. Symmetry and deaf bands. 9.3 Phononic crystals Complex band structure. Polarization evolution across phononic band gap. 9.4 Super-cells and defect mode Discussion of wave confinement in relation with evanescence. 10 Locally-resonant crystals [30 p.] 10.1 Local resonance, Fano resonance, metamaterials Discussion of the difference between Bragg band gaps and locally-resonant band gaps. 10.2 1D corrugated waveguides Resonances introduced by resonators grafted along a waveguide.

Reviews

This topic is rather new and the purpose of the author herein is exactly to propose a handbook which runs from basic physics to potential applications. The theoretical framework is engineering mathematics, and the book is easy to read. Zentralblatt f r Mathematik


Author Information

Vincent Laude, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Besançon cedex, France.

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