TY - GEN
T1 - APPLICATION OF PASSIVE CONSTRAINED VISCOELASTIC LAYER IN PLATES WITH ACOUSTIC BLACK HOLES
AU - Li, Jianhui
AU - Zheng, Ling
AU - Deng, Jie
AU - Li, Yinong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© International Institute of Acoustics and Vibration (IIAV), 2022.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - The Acoustic Black Hole (ABH) effect is the phenomenon in which the wave velocity in the thin-walled structure decreases gradually by gradient variation in the geometrical parameters or material behavior, and the wave velocity decreases to zero without reflection in the ideal scenario of a zero-thickness wedge. However, the ideal ABH is hard to achieve in practice, so the truncation of the edge will lead to a non-zero reflection coefficient and weaken the ideal ABH effect. In recent years, a thin viscoelastic layer on the edge is often used to dissipate energy and reduce vibration, but most studies use free damping techniques. Compared with the unconstrained viscoelastic layer (UVL), the passive constrained viscoelastic layer(PCVL) is more efficient, through a constrained layer (CL) on the surface of the viscoelastic layer(VL). In this paper, PCVL is used to improve the efficiency of truncated acoustic black holes in plates. Under the Rayleigh-Ritz framework, a semi-analytical model was presented for the vibration analyses of an ABH plate with PCVL, where the displacement fields are expanded by Gaussian functions. The model is validated through finite element (FEM) simulations. By analyzing the forced vibration of ABH plates with different damping layers, it is observed that a truncated ABH plate with PCVL performs better than an ABH plate with UVL.
AB - The Acoustic Black Hole (ABH) effect is the phenomenon in which the wave velocity in the thin-walled structure decreases gradually by gradient variation in the geometrical parameters or material behavior, and the wave velocity decreases to zero without reflection in the ideal scenario of a zero-thickness wedge. However, the ideal ABH is hard to achieve in practice, so the truncation of the edge will lead to a non-zero reflection coefficient and weaken the ideal ABH effect. In recent years, a thin viscoelastic layer on the edge is often used to dissipate energy and reduce vibration, but most studies use free damping techniques. Compared with the unconstrained viscoelastic layer (UVL), the passive constrained viscoelastic layer(PCVL) is more efficient, through a constrained layer (CL) on the surface of the viscoelastic layer(VL). In this paper, PCVL is used to improve the efficiency of truncated acoustic black holes in plates. Under the Rayleigh-Ritz framework, a semi-analytical model was presented for the vibration analyses of an ABH plate with PCVL, where the displacement fields are expanded by Gaussian functions. The model is validated through finite element (FEM) simulations. By analyzing the forced vibration of ABH plates with different damping layers, it is observed that a truncated ABH plate with PCVL performs better than an ABH plate with UVL.
KW - 2D semi-analytical model
KW - Acoustic Black Hole (ABH)
KW - Gaussian expansion method
KW - Passive constrained viscoelastic layer(PCVL)
KW - Vibration reduction
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85149869373&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85149869373
T3 - Proceedings of the International Congress on Sound and Vibration
BT - Proceedings of the 28th International Congress on Sound and Vibration, ICSV 2022
PB - Society of Acoustics
T2 - 28th International Congress on Sound and Vibration, ICSV 2022
Y2 - 24 July 2022 through 28 July 2022
ER -