2. Design and Result
As shown in
Figure 1a, the waveguide unit (
L *
H = 0.5
λ * 0.1
λ) proposed in this work is composed of five resonators, whose cross-sectional length varies with the gradient and can be regarded as a geometric sequence.
L and
H are the length and height of the waveguide unit. Following the reference [
20], the structure featuring a gradient in channel spacing possesses complex acoustic impedance, which is a key to realizing simultaneous phase and amplitude modulation. Thus, we also design a gradient waveguide. If we define ‘
c’ as the common ratio, the cross-sectional length and neck length of five resonators can be expressed as:
a1 = (1 −
c)*
L/(1 −
c5),
a2 =
ca1,
a3 =
c2a1,
a4 =
c3a1,
a5 =
c4a1;
b1 =
a1/2,
b2 =
cb1,
b3 =
c2b1,
b4 =
c3b1,
b5 =
c4b1. It should be noted that different values of
H1 and
H2 lead to various effective acoustic velocities, so as to achieve different phase delays. Thus, the phase modulation can be realized by altering the values of
H1 and
H2. Thus, the heights of channel and resonators are adjustable and can be expressed as
H1 =
H/
w and
H2 = (
H −
H/
w)/2, respectively. Where ‘
w’ is a scale factor to control the height of
H1 and
H2. The waveguide unit is filled with air and the incident wavelength is 0.1 m. Of note, the wavefront modulation can be realized by changing the geometric parameters of the waveguide unit. Therefore, the number, length, or position of the resonators can be regarded as the degrees of freedom to manipulate the transmission waves. To simplify the design method, we only adopt common ratio ‘
c’ and scale factor ‘
w’ to manipulate the transmitted waves in this work. Herein, we fix the number of resonant unit (
n = 5) and define the neck length as
bn =
an/2.
To calculate the amplitude and phase response of the waveguide unit, finite element software “COMSOL Multiphysics” is adopted. The frequency domain in the pressure acoustic module is utilized, and the background of the medium is selected as air:
ρair = 1.21 kg/m
3,
cair = 343 m/s. The amplitude and phase responses can be obtained by “
” and “
”, respectively, with
being the acoustic pressure of the transmission wave. As shown in
Figure 1b,c, although full PM can be achieved by manipulating the scale factor ‘
w’, full PM and full AM are unable to be realized simultaneously by utilizing only one degree of freedom (‘
c’ or ‘
w’). Therefore, we have to add an extra degree of freedom and investigate the possibility of using both common ratio ‘
c’ and scale factor ‘
w’ to achieve complete wavefront modulation. As shown in
Figure 1d,c, when the scale factor ‘
w’ is not large enough (
w < 18), the full PM and AM cannot be achieved even though two degrees of freedom are adopted here. With the increase of ‘
w’, the range of phase and amplitude shift is expanded, that is to say, the ability of PM and AM could be improved with the decrease of channel width. In addition, the common ratio ‘
c’ also has a great influence on wavefront modulation. For PM, it is hard to achieve 0–0.4
π and 1.6
π–2
π without high-value of common ratio ‘
c’; For AM, we have to increase the value of ‘
c’ to obtain a lower transmittance (for example, the value of ‘
c’ needs to exceed 5 if we want to obtain a transmittance around 0.1) with the altering of ‘
w’. Therefore, full PM and AM could be realized independently when the value of ‘
w’ and ‘
c’ is large enough. In addition, as shown in
Figure 1f, almost any combination of phase and amplitude can be realized accordingly by appropriately selecting geometric parameters. Each phase distribution in the range of 0–2
π corresponds to an amplitude coverage of 0–1, which can be utilized to achieve both PM and AM simultaneously, so as to realize acoustic focusing with intensity modulation.
When the resonators shown in
Figure 1a have the same cross-sectional length, that is
c = 1 and
a1 =
a2 =
a3 =
a4 =
a5, the waveguide array becomes a traditional MS similar to the previous research. Considering a general metasurface with a thickness of
Lm, equivalent acoustic impedance of
Zm and wave number of
Km placed in infinite space with acoustic impedance of
Z, the following equation can be deduced [
20]:
where
θ represents the transmitted phase. The complete wavefront modulation cannot be achieved under this condition owing to the existence of coupling between the transmission phase and amplitude shown in Equation (1). To avoid this situation, the presence of the acoustic reactance term is necessary [
20].
The waveguide unit with several resonators proposed in our work, instead of having a constant resonator length, features a change in length at each step is governed by a constant common ratio, defined as:
. In which
and
are the resonator length of
and
resonator, respectively. By this definition, the waveguide can be well approximated as an exponential horn with a flare constant of
for structures with
. In which
N is the number of resonator and
is the effective length of the waveguide. The acoustic transmission coefficient can be solved as
with
ain and
aout are the resonator length for the first and last resonators, respectively,
L is the length of the unit,
k is wave number, and
and
are defined as
and
. Thus, it can be obtained that the transmission amplitude will be bounded by
. Therefore, waveguide unit featuring a gradient in resonator length has the ability to modulate the transmission amplitude.
Herein, the effective acoustic parameters could be obtained by calculating the reflection and transmission coefficients of the waveguide unit [
21] (see
Appendix A). As shown in
Figure 2a, the effective acoustic velocity and mass density are different under various channel widths. Meanwhile, as illustrated in
Figure 2b, the effective acoustic velocity and density depends on frequency as well. To verify the reliability of effective medium (EM), a data point with
w = 6 is selected and the corresponding acoustic parameters are substituted into the EM at 3430 Hz. As shown in
Figure 2c, the distribution of acoustic field in EM is almost the same as that in waveguide unit, which indicates that the proposed EM method has a good applicability. Note that the difference in the sound pressure between the resonator part and its effective medium can be neglected because our aim is to retrieve the equivalent properties of the waveguide unit, which only needs to ensure the agreement between the waveguide unit and its effective medium in transmission field and reflection field. In other words, the effective medium only needs to provide the same amplitude and phase of reflection and transmission waves, which can be verified in
Figure 2c. Therefore, we could obtain the effective acoustic impedance with different values of ‘
c’, as shown in
Figure 3. For
c = 1.0, or equally the traditional unit cell, the acoustic reactance term exists only at resonance coupling of the incident wavelength and the structure, which cannot reduce the amplitude sharply in a wide range. Compared with ‘
c = 1′, the lower bound of transmittance expands gradually with the rising of ‘
c’, and the full amplitude coverage (0–1) can be realized around
c = 1.5. That is to say, as the value of ‘
c’ increases, the amplitude of transmitted waves could be manipulated effectively because the complex acoustic impedance can be realized by the gradient change in cross-section of the resonators. Moreover, with the rising of ‘
c’, the broad amplitude coverage could be achieved with a smaller value of ‘
w’. For instance, in the case of
c = 1.2 (
Figure 3c), the transmission coefficient can be reduced to 0.3 only when
w = 30. However, in the cases of
c = 1.2–1.8 (
Figure 3d–i), the transmission coefficient of 0.3 could be achieved in lower value of ‘
w’. It is not hard to imagine when the value of ‘
c’ is large enough, such as
c = 10 (shown in
Figure 1e), the wide range of AM may be realized by making use of different values of ‘
w’ independently, which provides more degrees of freedom for complete wavefront modulation.
As mentioned in the work [
22], the key to realize PM is to obtain the continuously gradient phase (CGP), which is equivalent to making the refractive index of the EM satisfy the following requirement:
where
ni represents the refractive index of the
ith EM;
λ0 represents the incident wavelength;
p represents the length of supercell composed of EM;
m represents the number of rigid walls in a supercell. We could also consider each EM is filled with materials having different wave velocities:
where
ci represents the velocity in the
ith EM. According to Equation (3), the effective refractive index can be obtained by inversion of the effective velocity. Thus, it can be concluded that the phase shift is due to the change of effective velocity in waveguide unit. Different values of ‘
w’ and ‘
c’ lead to various acoustic velocities, so as to achieve a wide range of phase shift in individual parameter combination of ‘
c’ and ‘
w’.
Please note that the device proposed in reference [
20] is a space-coiling metamaterial, through which the phase and amplitude modulations are able to be achieved simultaneously as well. However, they adopted four degrees of freedom including the width of incident port, the thickness of coil’s wall, the number of coils, and the common radio of channel width to manipulate the wavefront. As a comparison, only two degrees of freedom, common ratio ‘
c’ and scale factor ‘
w’, are needed in our work to obtain the simultaneous modulation of phase and amplitude for transmitted wavefront. Consequently, the approach we proposed is simpler than that in reference [
20] because the parameter optimization is more convenient in this work, which greatly simplifies the design philosophy and is more suitable for practical applications. Moreover, the focusing intensity shown in Ref. [
20] is fixed, and they did not mention the concept of intensity modulation of the focus, while it can be realized in our work, further promoting the application of the design.
Herein, as shown in
Figure 4, five waveguide units with CGP in the range of 0.4
π–2.0
π in steps of 0.4
π is designed. Analogous to the generalized Snell’s law in optics, if an acoustic wave with the frequency of
f is incident from one medium to another, the generalized Snell’s law in acoustics can be expressed as follows:
where
θi and
θt represent the angle of incidence and refraction, respectively;
ki = 2πf/ci,
kt = 2πf/ct,
ci and
ct represent the acoustic velocity of the incident medium and the transmitted medium. When the plane wave is normally incident on the waveguide array (
θi = 0), Equation (4) can be rewritten as:
As mentioned before, the EM of each unit have different wave velocities. Thus, the wave fronts inside different waveguide units accumulate different phase changes (
ϕi) when they pass though the waveguide array. The phase difference between the ‘acoustic paths’ in neighboring waveguide units is a constant and is given by Δ
ϕ = 2
π/5 = 0.4
π. Thus, the phase change between the neighboring supercells composed of waveguide units is always 2
π, which is required to maintain a continuous and smooth wavefront pattern of the transmitted wave. We assume that the length of supercell is
p, then we can use a constant transverse phase gradient (
dϕ/
dx = 2
π/
p) to describe the phase changes on the surface of the waveguide array composed of supercells. Such a transverse phase gradient gives rise to oblique transmitted waves due to the generalized Snell’s law of refraction in Equation (5), and the refraction angle can be manipulated by changing the parameter
p:
Thus, we could construct a PM structure by arraying waveguide units with CGP, and the acoustic focusing phenomenon can be achieved through constructive interference. Furthermore, according to
Table 1, any single phase in a CGP corresponds to five continuously gradient amplitudes (CGA), which can manipulate the transmissivity of acoustic waves. Herein, finite element software (COMSOL Multiphysics) is used to calculate the acoustic intensity field of the structure. The frequency domain in pressure acoustic module is adopted, and the background of the medium is selected as air:
ρair = 1.21 kg/m
3,
cair = 343 m/s. The outside boundaries are set as plane wave radiation conditions, so as to avoid the unwanted reflections. As shown in
Figure 5a,d, acoustic focusing phenomena with different intensities are obtained by altering the parameters of ‘
c’ and ‘
w’, which satisfies our purpose of manipulating the acoustic focusing intensity by utilizing only two degrees of freedom of the structure. In addition, as shown in
Figure 5b, the focal length could be modulated by alternating the length of supercell, which provides a way to achieve long-distance acoustic beam collimation.
Another advantage of the waveguide unit shown in our work is its broadband in wavefront modulation. As shown in
Figure 5c, acoustic focusing can be achieved within the band range of 1930 Hz–6430 Hz due to the coupling resonances given by five resonators in a waveguide unit. Of note, the focusing quality decreases in high frequency, which partly attributes to the non-strict linear response between the phase shift and the incident wavelength as shown in
Figure 5e. On the other hand, the transmissivity of some waveguide units is reduced rapidly at high frequency, which also affects the quality of focus. Nevertheless, as shown in grey area in
Figure 5e, it has a reasonably good performance when 0.872 ≤
f/
f0 ≤ 1.075 because the transmission coefficient is over 0.8 and the spanning range of phase shift expands to 80% of 2
π within this band, which reveals that the acoustic system can work in a broadband.
When sound wave propagates in narrow buildings and geometric structures, thermal loss and viscous loss will lead to sound wave attenuation. Specifically, the loss occurs in the acoustic thermal boundary layer and viscous boundary layer near the wall. In order to establish a model that matches the actual situation, we need to consider this phenomenon and evaluate the impact of these losses on the thermoviscous acoustic system. To eliminate the thermal viscosity loss (TVL), we propose the coding method to construct the lens. Only two kinds of waveguide units with opposite phase responses are required, and the huge TVL caused by some harsh parameters of the units with narrow width can be avoided in this case. The key to realizing the acoustic focusing is to make the acoustic waves reaching the focus have the same phase, that is, constructive interference occurs (see
Appendix B). Based on this theory, we can modulate the wavefront by arranging the position of two coding units with phase difference of
π. To make acoustic waves converge at a certain point, the placement positions of two coding units shall meet the following requirements:
where
xi+1 and
xi represent the position of two coding units;
q represents the focal length. Under this condition, as shown in
Figure 6a, we only need two waveguide units with a phase difference of
π, which provides an opportunity to improve the minimum size of the structure to reduce the TVL and facilitate sample preparation. Thus, we could select two coding units with low value of ‘
w’ to achieve acoustic focusing. According to Equation (7), we set
q = 0.6 m,
λ = 0.1 m,
x0 = 0 m here. Then, the position of other coding units can be determined in the following order:
x1 = 0.25000 m,
x2 = 0.36056 m,
x3 = 0.45000 m,
x4 = 0.52915 m,
x5 = 0.60208 m,
x6 = 0.67082 m. To numerically calculate the lossless structure and lossy structure, we adopt the ‘Pressure acoustic module’ and ‘thermoviscous acoustic module’, respectively, in finite element software of COMOSL. As shown in
Figure 6b, acoustic focusing is realized based on coding method using only two waveguide units with ‘
w = 2′ and ‘
w = 9.5′, respectively. By comparing the intensity of acoustic pressure in both lossy and lossless system shown in
Figure 6c, it can be confirmed that the TVL is small and can be ignored here.
As another interesting application of the structure proposed in this work, the capability of wavefront shaping may be improved by means of the MS composed of waveguide units with simultaneous amplitude and phase modulation (APM) compared with traditional single-phase modulation (SPM). As an illustrative example, in the case of Airy beam shown in
Figure 7, both APM and SPM have been considered.
Figure 7a,b are the discrete amplitude and phase information for waveguide array. For Airy beam based on SPM, some unwanted waves along other directions are generated in the transmission field due to the parasitic diffraction [
23]. While for Airy beam based on APM, perfect Airy beam is produced. The pressure fields shown in
Figure 7c,d indicate that, compared with SPM method, the MS designed by APM could improve the beam quality.