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Showing papers on "Acoustic wave published in 2014"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The demonstrated metasurface can not only steer an acoustic beam as expected from the generalized Snell's law, but also exhibits various unique properties such as conversion from propagating wave to surface mode, extraordinary beam-steering and apparent negative refraction through higher-order diffraction.
Abstract: Metasurfaces are a family of novel wavefront-shaping devices with planar profile and subwavelength thickness. Acoustic metasurfaces with ultralow profile yet extraordinary wave manipulating properties would be highly desirable for improving the performance of many acoustic wave-based applications. However, designing acoustic metasurfaces with similar functionality to their electromagnetic counterparts remains challenging with traditional metamaterial design approaches. Here we present a design and realization of an acoustic metasurface based on tapered labyrinthine metamaterials. The demonstrated metasurface can not only steer an acoustic beam as expected from the generalized Snell's law, but also exhibits various unique properties such as conversion from propagating wave to surface mode, extraordinary beam-steering and apparent negative refraction through higher-order diffraction. Such designer acoustic metasurfaces provide a new design methodology for acoustic signal modulation devices and may be useful for applications such as acoustic imaging, beam steering, ultrasound lens design and acoustic surface wave-based applications.

666 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors highlight some of this literature to provide the reader with a historical basis, routes for more detailed study, and an impression of the field's future directions.
Abstract: Fluid manipulations at the microscale and beyond are powerfully enabled through the use of 10–1,000-MHz acoustic waves. A superior alternative in many cases to other microfluidic actuation techniques, such high-frequency acoustics is almost universally produced by surface acoustic wave devices that employ electromechanical transduction in wafer-scale or thin-film piezoelectric media to generate the kinetic energy needed to transport and manipulate fluids placed in adjacent microfluidic structures. These waves are responsible for a diverse range of complex fluid transport phenomena—from interfacial fluid vibration and drop and confined fluid transport to jetting and atomization—underlying a flourishing research literature spanning fundamental fluid physics to chip-scale engineering applications. We highlight some of this literature to provide the reader with a historical basis, routes for more detailed study, and an impression of the field's future directions.

438 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A unique configuration of tilted-angle standing surface acoustic waves (taSSAW), which are oriented at an optimally designed inclination to the flow direction in the microfluidic channel, is introduced and it is demonstrated that this design significantly improves the efficiency and sensitivity of acoustic separation techniques.
Abstract: Separation of cells is a critical process for studying cell properties, disease diagnostics, and therapeutics. Cell sorting by acoustic waves offers a means to separate cells on the basis of their size and physical properties in a label-free, contactless, and biocompatible manner. The separation sensitivity and efficiency of currently available acoustic-based approaches, however, are limited, thereby restricting their widespread application in research and health diagnostics. In this work, we introduce a unique configuration of tilted-angle standing surface acoustic waves (taSSAW), which are oriented at an optimally designed inclination to the flow direction in the microfluidic channel. We demonstrate that this design significantly improves the efficiency and sensitivity of acoustic separation techniques. To optimize our device design, we carried out systematic simulations of cell trajectories, matching closely with experimental results. Using numerically optimized design of taSSAW, we successfully separated 2- and 10-µm-diameter polystyrene beads with a separation efficiency of ∼99%, and separated 7.3- and 9.9-µm-polystyrene beads with an efficiency of ∼97%. We illustrate that taSSAW is capable of effectively separating particles–cells of approximately the same size and density but different compressibility. Finally, we demonstrate the effectiveness of the present technique for biological–biomedical applications by sorting MCF-7 human breast cancer cells from nonmalignant leukocytes, while preserving the integrity of the separated cells. The method introduced here thus offers a unique route for separating circulating tumor cells, and for label-free cell separation with potential applications in biological research, disease diagnostics, and clinical practice.

400 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the phase shift profile covering 2 range induced by labyrinthine units was designed to reflect acoustic waves in an unusual yet controllable manner, and an anomalous reflection and ultrathin planar lens with adjustable focal point were both demonstrated with carefully designed metasurfaces.
Abstract: Metasurfaces with subwavelength thickness have exhibited unconventional phenomena in ways that could not be mimicked by traditional materials. Here we report the analytical design and experimental realizations of acoustic metasurface with hitherto inaccessible functionality of manipulating the reflected waves arbitrarily. By suitably designing the phase shift profile covering 2 range induced by labyrinthine units, the metasurface can reflect acoustic waves in an unusual yet controllable manner. Anomalous reflection and ultrathin planar lens with adjustable focal point were both demonstrated with carefully designed metasurfaces. Remarkably, the free manipulation of phase shifts offers great flexibility in the design of non-paraxial or paraxial acoustic self-accelerating beams with arbitrary trajectories. With the extraordinary wave-steering ability, the metasurface should open exciting possibilities for designing compact acoustic components with versatile potential and may find a variety of applications ranging from ultrasound imaging to field caustic engineering.

319 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
24 Apr 2014-Sensors
TL;DR: A wide variety of FPI sensors are reviewed in terms of fabrication methods, principle of operation and their sensing applications in a study on interferometric optical fiber sensors.
Abstract: Optical fibers have been involved in the area of sensing applications for more than four decades. Moreover, interferometric optical fiber sensors have attracted broad interest for their prospective applications in sensing temperature, refractive index, strain measurement, pressure, acoustic wave, vibration, magnetic field, and voltage. During this time, numerous types of interferometers have been developed such as Fabry-Perot, Michelson, Mach-Zehnder, Sagnac Fiber, and Common-path interferometers. Fabry-Perot interferometer (FPI) fiber-optic sensors have been extensively investigated for their exceedingly effective, simple fabrication as well as low cost aspects. In this study, a wide variety of FPI sensors are reviewed in terms of fabrication methods, principle of operation and their sensing applications. The chronology of the development of FPI sensors and their implementation in various applications are discussed.

291 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The electric field potential, electric field and magnetic field in the form of traveling wave solutions for the two-dimensional ZK equation are found by applying the extended direct algebraic method and the efficiency of the method can be demonstrated.
Abstract: The Zakharov-Kuznetsov (ZK) equation is an isotropic nonlinear evolution equation, first derived for weakly nonlinear ion-acoustic waves in a strongly magnetized lossless plasma in two dimensions. In the present study, by applying the extended direct algebraic method, we found the electric field potential, electric field and magnetic field in the form of traveling wave solutions for the two-dimensional ZK equation. The solutions for the ZK equation are obtained precisely and the efficiency of the method can be demonstrated. The stability of these solutions and the movement role of the waves are analyzed by making graphs of the exact solutions.

209 citations


PatentDOI
14 Mar 2014-Nature
TL;DR: Three enabling properties of particular interest—polarization rotation, enlarged angular diffraction, and frequency domain colour filtering—are demonstrated and it is suggested that this technology can be used as a platform for low-cost, high-performance holographic video displays.
Abstract: An anisotropic spatial acousto-optic modulator for a holographic display system includes a substrate, an anisotropic waveguide that guides light into a single polarization, and a transducer that generates surface acoustic waves that propagate linearly with the guided, polarized light, converting at least some of the polarized light into a leaky mode of orthogonally polarized light. The acoustic waves may be encoded with holographic information. The modulator may include coupling devices for coupling light into the waveguide, which may have multiple channels. A holographic video display system includes at least one anisotropic spatial acousto-optic modulator. The pattern of the surface acoustic waves, encoded with holographic information, acts as a diffraction pattern that causes the modulator output to form a wavefront that becomes at least part of a holographic image. The system may have multiple channels in multiple waveguides, wherein each waveguide writes one or more lines of the holographic image.

207 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review focuses on the acoustic aspects of optoacoustic tomography, specifically acoustic reconstruction algorithms and imaging-system practicalities, and adopts a holistic approach to discuss the many links between the two aspects.
Abstract: Optoacoustic tomography enables volumetric imaging with optical contrast in biological tissue at depths beyond the optical mean free path by the use of optical excitation and acoustic detection. The hybrid nature of optoacoustic tomography gives rise to two distinct inverse problems: The optical inverse problem, related to the propagation of the excitation light in tissue, and the acoustic inverse problem, which deals with the propagation and detection of the generated acoustic waves. Since the two inverse problems have different physical underpinnings and are governed by different types of equations, they are often treated independently as unrelated problems. From an imaging standpoint, the acoustic inverse problem relates to forming an image from the measured acoustic data, whereas the optical inverse problem relates to quantifying the formed image. This review focuses on the acoustic aspects of optoacoustic tomography, specifically acoustic reconstruction algorithms and imaging-system practicalities. As these two aspects are intimately linked, and no silver bullet exists in the path towards high-performance imaging, we adopt a holistic approach in our review and discuss the many links between the two aspects. Four classes of reconstruction algorithms are reviewed: time-domain (so called back-projection) formulae, frequency-domain formulae, time-reversal algorithms, and model-based algorithms. These algorithms are discussed in the context of the various acoustic detectors and detection surfaces which are commonly used in experimental studies. We further discuss the effects of non-ideal imaging scenarios on the quality of reconstruction and review methods that can mitigate these effects. Namely, we consider the cases of finite detector aperture, limited-view tomography, spatial under-sampling of the acoustic signals, and acoustic heterogeneities and losses.

205 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, microwave frequency surface acoustic wave transducers are integrated with nanophotonic resonators on piezoelectric aluminum nitride substrates to achieve modulation of the resonance modes at above 10 GHz with the acoustic wavelength significantly below the optical wavelength.
Abstract: Light–sound interactions have long been exploited in various acousto-optic devices based on bulk crystalline materials. Conventionally, these devices operate in megahertz frequency range where the acoustic wavelength is much longer than the optical wavelength and a long interaction length is required to attain significant coupling. With nanoscale transducers, acoustic waves with sub-optical wavelengths can now be excited to induce strong acousto-optic coupling in nanophotonic devices. Here we demonstrate microwave frequency surface acoustic wave transducers co-integrated with nanophotonic resonators on piezoelectric aluminum nitride substrates. Acousto-optic modulation of the resonance modes at above 10 GHz with the acoustic wavelength significantly below the optical wavelength is achieved. The phase and modal matching conditions in this scheme are investigated for efficient modulation. The new acousto-optic platform can lead to novel optical devices based on nonlinear Brillouin processes and provides a direct, wideband link between optical and microwave photons for microwave photonics and quantum optomechanics. Acousto-optic modulators use acoustic waves to control light on a chip. Here, the authors achieve modulation in nanophotonic resonators using microwave frequency surface acoustic waves with wavelength smaller than the optical wavelength towards highly integrated devices on silicon.

164 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In a subwavelength-diameter optical fibre, the first experimental observation of Brillouin light scattering from surface acoustic waves is reported, which opens new opportunities for various sensing applications, not only in microwave photonics and nonlinear plasmonics.
Abstract: In optical fibres, stimulated Brillouin scattering is a fundamental interaction where light generates bulk elastic waves and it is backward scattered by them. Here, Beugnot et al. demonstrate the generation of backward-propagating surface acoustic wave Brillouin scattering in subwavelength-diameter optical fibres.

157 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that acoustic droplet vaporization is initiated by a combination of highly nonlinear distortion of the acoustic wave before it hits a droplet and focusing of the distorted wave by the droplet itself.
Abstract: Acoustically sensitive emulsion droplets composed of a liquid perfluorocarbon have the potential to be a highly efficient system for local drug delivery, embolotherapy, or for tumor imaging. The physical mechanisms underlying the acoustic activation of these phase-change emulsions into a bubbly dispersion, termed acoustic droplet vaporization, have not been well understood. The droplets have a very high activation threshold; its frequency dependence does not comply with homogeneous nucleation theory and localized nucleation spots have been observed. Here we show that acoustic droplet vaporization is initiated by a combination of two phenomena: highly nonlinear distortion of the acoustic wave before it hits the droplet and focusing of the distorted wave by the droplet itself. At high excitation pressures, nonlinear distortion causes significant superharmonics with wavelengths of the order of the droplet size. These superharmonics strongly contribute to the focusing effect; therefore, the proposed mechanism also explains the observed pressure thresholding effect. Our interpretation is validated with experimental data captured with an ultrahigh-speed camera on the positions of the nucleation spots, where we find excellent agreement with the theoretical prediction. Moreover, the presented mechanism explains the hitherto counterintuitive dependence of the nucleation threshold on the ultrasound frequency. The physical insight allows for the optimization of acoustic droplet vaporization for therapeutic applications, in particular with respect to the acoustic pressures required for activation, thereby minimizing the negative bioeffects associated with the use of high-intensity ultrasound.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work demonstrates a metamaterial-enhanced acoustic sensing system that achieves more than 20 dB signal-to-noise enhancement (over an order of magnitude enhancement in detection limit) and shows that weak acoustic pulse signals overwhelmed by the noise are successfully recovered.
Abstract: Acoustic sensors have myriad important applications, but they are limited by their pressure sensitivity. Chen et al. show how the use of graded anisotropic acoustic metamaterial structures can help overcome this by amplifying the acoustic waves via compression effects.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the quantum hydrodynamic model is applied to two-dimensional ion-acoustic waves in quantum plasmas and a deformed Kortewegde Vries (dKdV) equation is obtained by reductive perturbation method.
Abstract: The quantum hydrodynamic model is applied to two-dimensional ion-acoustic waves in quantum plasmas. The two-dimensional quantum hydrodynamic model is used to obtain a deformed Kortewegde Vries (dKdV) equation by reductive perturbation method. By using the solution of auxiliary ordinary equations, a extended direct algebraic method is described to construct the exact solutions for nonlinear quantum dKdV equation. The present results are describing the generation and evolution of such waves, their interactions, and their stability.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The absence of any physical limitations preventing the downscaling of SAW-driven internal streaming to nanoliter microreactors and beyond is demonstrated by extending SAW microfluidics up to operating frequencies in the GHz range.
Abstract: The relevant length scales in sub-nanometer amplitude surface acoustic wave-driven acoustic streaming are demonstrated. We demonstrate the absence of any physical limitations preventing the downscaling of SAW-driven internal streaming to nanoliter microreactors and beyond by extending SAW microfluidics up to operating frequencies in the GHz range. This method is applied to nanoliter scale fluid mixing.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that the choice of frequency is a vitally important consideration in the design of small-scale devices employing acoustic streaming for microfluidics, by elucidating the effects of frequency on the scale of acoustically driven flows.
Abstract: Acoustic streaming underpins an exciting range of fluid manipulation phenomena of rapidly growing significance in microfluidics, where the streaming often assumes the form of a steady, laminar jet emanating from the device surface, driven by the attenuation of acoustic energy within the beam of sound propagating through the liquid. The frequencies used to drive such phenomena are often chosen ad hoc to accommodate fabrication and material issues. In this work, we seek a better understanding of the effects of sound frequency and power on acoustic streaming. We present and, using surface acoustic waves, experimentally verify a laminar jet model that is based on the turbulent jet model of Lighthill, which is appropriate for acoustic streaming seen at micro- to nanoscales, between 20 and 936 MHz and over a broad range of input power. Our model eliminates the critically problematic acoustic source singularity present in Lighthill's model, replacing it with a finite emission area and enabling determination of the streaming velocity close to the source. At high acoustic power P (and hence high jet Reynolds numbers ReJ associated with fast streaming), the laminar jet model predicts a one-half power dependence (U∼P1/2∼ ReJ) similar to the turbulent jet model. However, the laminar model may also be applied to jets produced at low powers-and hence low jet Reynolds numbers ReJ-where a linear relationship between the beam power and streaming velocity exists: U∼P∼ReJ2. The ability of the laminar jet model to predict the acoustic streaming behavior across a broad range of frequencies and power provides a useful tool in the analysis of microfluidics devices, explaining peculiar observations made by several researchers in the literature. In particular, by elucidating the effects of frequency on the scale of acoustically driven flows, we show that the choice of frequency is a vitally important consideration in the design of small-scale devices employing acoustic streaming for microfluidics.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An analytical vibroacoustic membrane model is developed to study sound transmission behavior of the MAM under a normal incidence and can be served as an efficient tool for design of such membrane-type metamaterials.
Abstract: By considering the elastic membrane's dissipation, the membrane-type acoustic metamaterial (MAM) has been demonstrated to be a super absorber for low-frequency sound. In the paper, a theoretical vibroacoustic plate model is developed to reveal the sound energy absorption mechanism within the MAM under a plane normal incidence. Based on the plate model in conjunction with the point matching method, the in-plane strain energy of the membrane due to the resonant and antiresonant motion of the attached masses can be accurately captured by solving the coupled vibroacoustic integrodifferential equation. The sound absorption ability of the MAM is quantitatively determined, which is also in good agreement with the prediction from the finite element method. In particular, microstructure effects including eccentricity of the attached masses, the depth, thickness, and loss factor of the membrane on sound absorption peak values are discussed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a low-velocity impact was used to damage one of the composite laminates, and an ultrasonic C-scan was applied to reveal the extent of barely visible impact damage.
Abstract: The paper presents an application of nonlinear acoustics for impact damage detection in composite laminates. Two composite plates were analysed. A low-velocity impact was used to damage one of the plates. Ultrasonic C-scan was applied to reveal the extent of barely visible impact damage. Finite element modelling was used to find vibration mode shapes of the plates and to estimate the local defect resonance frequency in the damaged plate. A delamination divergence study was performed to establish excitation parameters for nonlinear acoustics tests used for damage detection. Both composite plates were instrumented with surface-bonded, low-profile piezoceramic transducers that were used for the high-frequency ultrasonic excitation. Both an arbitrary frequency and a frequency corresponding to the local defect resonance were investigated. The low-frequency modal excitation was applied using an electromagnetic shaker. Scanning laser vibrometry was applied to acquire the vibro-acoustic responses from the plates. The study not only demonstrates that nonlinear vibro-acoustic modulations can successfully reveal the barely visible impact damage in composite plates, but also that the entire procedure can be enhanced when the ultrasonic excitation frequency corresponds to the resonant frequency of damage.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that the major mechanism involved corresponds to screening of the internal electric fields by light-induced charges, which in turn induces stress by inverse piezoelectric effect, which opens new perspectives for the use of ferroelectric oxides in ultrahigh frequency acoustic devices and the development of new GHz-THz acoustic sources.
Abstract: Generation of strain using light is a key issue for future development of ultrasonic devices. Up to now, photo-induced GHz-THz acoustic phonons have been mainly explored in metals and semiconductors, and in artificial nanostructures to enhance their phononic emission. However, despite their inherent strong polarization (providing natural asymmetry) and superior piezoelectric properties, ferroelectric oxides have been only poorly regarded. Here, by using ultrafast optical pump-probe measurements, we show that photogeneration/photodetection of coherent phonons in BiFeO3 ferroelectric leads, at room temperature, to the largest intensity ratio ever reported of GHz transverse acoustic wave versus the longitudinal one. It is found that the major mechanism involved corresponds to screening of the internal electric fields by light-induced charges, which in turn induces stress by inverse piezoelectric effect. This giant opto-acoustic response opens new perspectives for the use of ferroelectric oxides in ultrahigh frequency acoustic devices and the development of new GHz-THz acoustic sources.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate tunable acoustic absorption enabled by the coherent control of input waves, and they show that complete absorption of incident waves impinging on the metamaterial can be achieved for either symmetrical or anti-symmetrical inputs in the forward and backward directions.
Abstract: We investigate tunable acoustic absorption enabled by the coherent control of input waves. It relies on coherent perfect absorption originally proposed in optics. By designing appropriate acoustic metamaterial structures with resonating effective bulk modulus or density, we show that complete absorption of incident waves impinging on the metamaterial can be achieved for either symmetrical or anti-symmetrical inputs in the forward and backward directions. By adjusting the relative phase between the two incident beams, absorption can be tuned effectively from unity to zero, making coherent control useful in applications like acoustic modulators, noise controllers, transducers, and switches.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An acoustofluidic particle separator with submicron separation resolution is presented to study the continuous, label-free, and contactless separation of polystyrene (PS) particles based on their acoustothermic parameters such as size, density, compressibility and shape.
Abstract: Submicron separation is the segregation of particles having a diameter difference of less than one micrometre. We present an acoustofluidic particle separator with submicron separation resolution to study the continuous, label-free, and contactless separation of polystyrene (PS) particles based on their acoustofluidic parameters such as size, density, compressibility and shape. In this work, the submicron separation of PS microspheres, having a marginal size difference, is achieved inside a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) microfluidic channel via travelling surface acoustic waves (TSAWs). The TSAWs of different frequencies (200, 192, 155, and 129 MHz), propagating normal to the fluid flow direction inside the PDMS microchannel, realized continuous separation of particles with a diameter difference as low as 200 nm. A theoretical framework based on the rigid and elastic theories is presented to support the experimental results.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a class of three-dimensional linear elastic metamaterials for which the effective bulk modulus and mass density can be adjusted independently over a large range is presented.
Abstract: Metamaterials can be engineered to control not just light, but also acoustic waves. The authors fabricate a class of three-dimensional, linear elastic metamaterials for which the effective bulk modulus and mass density can be adjusted independently over a large range. This tuning is not possible in ordinary materials, but through geometric design this scheme allows for ``acoustic cloaking'', in which an object may be shielded from noise or other sound waves, such as sonar.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an axisymmetric rigid near-sphere oscillating in quiescent fluid along a direction perpendicular to its symmetry axis is considered, and the propulsion speed is derived at leading order in the Reynolds number and the deviation of the shape from that of a sphere.
Abstract: Recent experiments showed that standing acoustic waves could be exploited to induce self-propulsion of rigid metallic particles in the direction perpendicular to the acoustic wave. We propose in this paper a physical mechanism for these observations based on the interplay between inertial forces in the fluid and the geometrical asymmetry of the particle shape. We consider an axisymmetric rigid near-sphere oscillating in a quiescent fluid along a direction perpendicular to its symmetry axis. The kinematics of oscillations can be either prescribed or can result dynamically from the presence of an external oscillating velocity field. Steady streaming in the fluid, the inertial rectification of the time-periodic oscillating flow, generates steady stresses on the particle which, in general, do not average to zero, resulting in a finite propulsion speed along the axis of the symmetry of the particle and perpendicular to the oscillation direction. Our derivation of the propulsion speed is obtained at leading order in the Reynolds number and the deviation of the shape from that of a sphere. The results of our model are consistent with the experimental measurements, and more generally explains how time periodic forcing from an acoustic field can be harnessed to generate autonomous motion.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a theoretical expression for the acoustic interaction force between small spherical particles suspended in an ideal fluid exposed to an external acoustic wave is presented. But it is only applied to the case where the particles, either compressible liquid droplets or elastic microspheres, are much smaller than the acoustic wavelength.
Abstract: We present a theoretical expression for the acoustic interaction force between small spherical particles suspended in an ideal fluid exposed to an external acoustic wave. The acoustic interaction force is the part of the acoustic radiation force on one given particle involving the scattered waves from the other particles. The particles, either compressible liquid droplets or elastic microspheres, are considered to be much smaller than the acoustic wavelength. In this so-called Rayleigh limit, the acoustic interaction forces between the particles are well approximated by gradients of pair-interaction potentials with no restriction on the interparticle distance. The theory is applied to studies of the acoustic interaction force on a particle suspension in either standing or traveling plane waves. The results show aggregation regions along the wave propagation direction, while particles may attract or repel each other in the transverse direction. In addition, a mean-field approximation is developed to describe the acoustic interaction force in an emulsion of oil droplets in water.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The dust acoustic wave (DAW) was first discussed by P. K. Shukla in 1989 at the First Capri Workshop on Dusty Plasmas as mentioned in this paper, which has generated and sustained a large body of theoretical and experimental research that has clarified the physics of collective effects in dusty plasmas.
Abstract: The dust acoustic wave (DAW) was first discussed by P. K. Shukla in May of 1989 at the First Capri Workshop on Dusty Plasmas. In the past 25 years, the subsequent publication of the linear and nonlinear properties of the DAW (Rao, N. N., Shukla, P. K. and Yu, M. Y. 1990 Planet. Space Sci.38, 543) has generated and sustained a large body of theoretical and experimental research that has clarified the physics of collective effects in dusty plasmas. A unique feature of the DAW is that it can be observed (literally) using laser illumination and high-speed videography, revealing details of wave-particle interactions at an unprecedented single particle level. This paper attempts to review some of the contributions and extensions of dust acoustic wave physics, as well as identify recent findings that illustrate the potential importance of this dust wave in the agglomeration of dust particles.

Journal ArticleDOI
Wenqi Wang1, Yangbo Xie1, Adam Konneker1, Bogdan Ioan Popa1, Steven A. Cummer1 
TL;DR: In this paper, two diffractive acoustic lenses with subwavelength thickness, planar profile, and broad operation bandwidth are presented to demonstrate the lensing effect over more than 40% of the central frequency.
Abstract: We present here two diffractive acoustic lenses with subwavelength thickness, planar profile, and broad operation bandwidth. Tapered labyrinthine unit cells with their inherently broadband effective material properties are exploited in our design. Both the measured and the simulated results are showcased to demonstrate the lensing effect over more than 40% of the central frequency. The focusing of a propagating Gaussian modulated sinusoidal pulse is also demonstrated. This work paves the way for designing diffractive acoustic lenses and more generalized phase engineering diffractive elements with labyrinthine acoustic metamaterials.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a phononic crystal (PC) composed of a square array of densely packed square iron rods in air is used to construct a near zero-refractive index (ZRI) material.
Abstract: Zero-refractive-index materials may lead to promising applications in various fields. Here, we design and fabricate a near Zero-Refractive-Index (ZRI) material using a phononic crystal (PC) composed of a square array of densely packed square iron rods in air. The dispersion relation exhibits a nearly flat band across the Brillouin zone at the reduced frequency f = 0.5443c/a, which is due to Fabry-Perot (FP) resonance. By using a retrieval method, we find that both the effective mass density and the reciprocal of the effective bulk modulus are close to zero at frequencies near the flat band. We also propose an equivalent tube network model to explain the mechanisms of the near ZRI effect. This FP-resonance-induced near ZRI material offers intriguing wave manipulation properties. We demonstrate both numerically and experimentally its ability to shield a scattering obstacle and guide acoustic waves through a bent structure.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, direct numerical simulations are used to examine the pressure fluctuations generated by fully developed turbulence in a Mach 2.5 turbulent boundary layer, with an emphasis on the acoustic fluctuations radiated into the free stream.
Abstract: Direct numerical simulations are used to examine the pressure fluctuations generated by fully developed turbulence in a Mach 2.5 turbulent boundary layer, with an emphasis on the acoustic fluctuations radiated into the free stream. Single- and multi-point statistics of computed surface pressure fluctuations show good agreement with measurements and numerical simulations at similar flow conditions. Consistent with spark shadowgraphs obtained in free flight, the quasi-homogeneous acoustic near field in the free-stream region consists of randomly spaced wavepackets with a finite spatial coherence. The free-stream pressure fluctuations exhibit important differences from the surface pressure fluctuations in amplitude, frequency content and convection speeds. Such information can be applied towards improved modelling of boundary layer receptivity in conventional supersonic facilities and, hence, enable a better utilization of transition data acquired in such wind tunnels. The predicted acoustic characteristics are compared with the limited available measurements. Finally, the numerical database is used to understand the acoustic source mechanisms, with the finding that the supersonically convecting eddies that can directly radiate to the free stream are confined to the buffer zone within the boundary layer.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a focused traveling surface acoustic wave (F-TSAW) was used to generate chemical concentration gradients in a microfluidic channel using focused travelling surface acoustic waves.
Abstract: We demonstrate a simple device to generate chemical concentration gradients in a microfluidic channel using focused travelling surface acoustic waves (F-TSAW). A pair of curved interdigitated metal electrodes deposited on the surface of a piezoelectric (LiNbO3) substrate disseminate high frequency sound waves when actuated by an alternating current source. The F-TSAW produces chaotic acoustic streaming flow upon its interaction with the fluid inside a microfluidic channel, which mixes confluent streams of chemicals in a controlled fashion for an adjustable and rapidly switching gradient generation.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the amplitude and phase of the transmitted SAW during magnetic field sweeps showed a clear resonant behavior at a field close to the one calculated to give a precession frequency equal to the SAW frequency.
Abstract: Surface acoustic waves (SAW) were generated on a thin layer of the ferromagnetic semiconductor (Ga,Mn)(As,P). The out-of-plane uniaxial magnetic anisotropy of this dilute magnetic semiconductor is very sensitive to the strain of the layer, making it an ideal test material for the dynamic control of magnetization via magnetostriction. The amplitude and phase of the transmitted SAW during magnetic field sweeps showed a clear resonant behavior at a field close to the one calculated to give a precession frequency equal to the SAW frequency. A resonance was observed from 5 to 85 K, just below the Curie temperature of the layer. A full analytical treatment of the coupled magnetization/acoustic dynamics showed that the magnetostrictive coupling modifies the elastic constants of the material and accordingly the wave-vector solution to the elastic wave equation. The shape and position of the resonance were well reproduced by the calculations, in particular the fact that velocity (phase) variations resonated at lower fields than the acoustic attenuation variations. We suggest one reinterpret SAW-driven ferromagnetic resonance as a form of resonant, dynamic, delta-E effect, a concept usually reserved for static magnetoelastic phenomena.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: 3D vectorial wave fields that satisfy the elastodynamic wave equation are extended and the method to recover Green's functions from points interior to an elastic, solid-state medium from purely external and one-sided measurements is demonstrated.
Abstract: The solution of the inverse scattering problem for the one-dimensional Schr¨ odinger equation is given by the Marchenko equation. Recently, a Marchenko-type equation has been derived for three-dimensional (3D) acoustic wave fields, whose solution has been shown to recover the Green’s functions from points within the medium to its exterior, using only single-sided scattered data. Here we extend this approach to 3D vectorial wave fields that satisfy the elastodynamic wave equation and recover Green’s functions from points interior to an elastic, solid-state medium from purely external and one-sided measurements. The method is demonstrated in a solid-earth-like model to construct Green’s functions using only subsurface sources, from earth-surface force and deformation sources and particle velocity and stress measurements.