Revealing the Sound Transmission Loss Capacities of Sandwich Metamaterials with Re-Entrant Negative Poisson's Ratio Configuration

Materials (Basel). 2023 Aug 30;16(17):5928. doi: 10.3390/ma16175928.

Abstract

Due to the influence of mass law, traditional lightweight sandwich structures have struggled to surpass solid structures in sound insulation performance. To this end, we propose an acoustic metamaterial structure with a sandwich configuration based on the re-entrant negative Poisson's ratio (NPR) structure and systematically investigate its sound transmission loss (STL) performance under incident plane wave conditions. We used the acoustic impedance tube method to experimentally study the sound insulation performance of the re-entrant NPR sandwich structure under free boundary conditions, and then established an acoustic analysis simulation model based on COMSOL Multiphysics software, which verified that the results obtained by the experiment and the numerical simulation were in good agreement. The results show that the sandwich structure exhibits excellent sound transmission loss performance in the studied frequency range (250-4000 Hz), and the overall sound insulation performance exceeds the curve of the mass theorem, basically achieving more than 20 dB when the sandwich thickness is 2 cm. Finally, we conduct parametric studies to establish a correlation between the geometric design of NPR sandwich structures and their sound transmission loss performance. The research shows that the changes of the length of the ribs, the distance from the ribs to the center of the unit, and the length of the upper wall and the lower wall have a significant impact on the sound insulation performance of the re-entrant NPR sandwich structure, while the change of the wall thickness basically will not affect the sound insulation performance of the sandwich structure. This research can provide practical ideas for the engineering application of noise suppression designs of lightweight structures.

Keywords: acoustic metamaterial; negative Poisson ratio; sandwich structure; sound transmission loss.

Grants and funding

This research was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (52375238), the Science and Technology Program of Guangzhou (202201020213, 202102020962) and GZHU-HKUST joint research fund (YH202109).