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Keywords = Helmholtz resonance

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9 pages, 1407 KB  
Article
Frequency-Dependent Effects of Alternating Magnetic Fields on the Growth Rate of Juvenile Daphnia magna
by Viacheslav V. Krylov, Daniil A. Sizov and Anastasia A. Sizova
Biophysica 2026, 6(2), 28; https://doi.org/10.3390/biophysica6020028 - 4 Apr 2026
Viewed by 245
Abstract
The biological effects of weak low-frequency magnetic fields (LFMFs) remain controversial, particularly regarding frequency-specific resonance-like responses. Many previous studies tested different frequencies sequentially, potentially introducing uncontrolled environmental variability. This study aimed to evaluate frequency-dependent effects of LFMFs on the growth of juvenile Daphnia [...] Read more.
The biological effects of weak low-frequency magnetic fields (LFMFs) remain controversial, particularly regarding frequency-specific resonance-like responses. Many previous studies tested different frequencies sequentially, potentially introducing uncontrolled environmental variability. This study aimed to evaluate frequency-dependent effects of LFMFs on the growth of juvenile Daphnia magna under strictly synchronized and temperature-controlled conditions. Genetically identical neonates from a single parthenogenetic brood were simultaneously exposed to sinusoidal 50 μT magnetic fields at 20, 25, 30, 35, or 40 Hz using spatially separated Helmholtz coils integrated into a closed-loop thermal stabilization system. Body length was measured after 48, 96, and 144 h of exposure. No significant growth differences were detected after 48 h. After 96 h, a significant biological effect was observed only at 30 Hz. The most pronounced responses occurred after 144 h, with significant growth stimulation at 25, 30, and 35 Hz and a maximal effect at 30 Hz. The frequency–response relationship exhibited a dome-shaped pattern that became less sharply peaked with prolonged exposure. These findings demonstrate duration-dependent and frequency-specific stimulation of juvenile daphnid growth with weak LFMFs. It suggests that exposure time critically influences the manifestation and breadth of resonance-like magnetobiological effects. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Biological Effects of Magnetic Fields)
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10 pages, 3136 KB  
Article
Checkerboard Helmholtz Resonator Metasurface for Dual-Mode Decoupled Dual-Band Coherent Perfect Absorption with Independently Tunable Frequencies
by Zimou Liu, Wenbo Liu, Zikai Du and Rui Yang
Micromachines 2026, 17(4), 406; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17040406 - 26 Mar 2026
Viewed by 283
Abstract
We present a checkerboard metasurface integrating interleaved Helmholtz resonator arrays with distinct geometrical parameters, enabling decoupled dual-band coherent perfect absorption (CPA) in both in-phase and anti-phase excitation conditions. Full-wave simulations confirm that the proposed structure achieves absorption rates exceeding 99% at 2.904, 3.024, [...] Read more.
We present a checkerboard metasurface integrating interleaved Helmholtz resonator arrays with distinct geometrical parameters, enabling decoupled dual-band coherent perfect absorption (CPA) in both in-phase and anti-phase excitation conditions. Full-wave simulations confirm that the proposed structure achieves absorption rates exceeding 99% at 2.904, 3.024, 3.788 and 3.856 THz, corresponding to two pairs of resonant modes enabled by the asymmetric transmission characteristics. Notably, by actively manipulating the relative phase difference between the two excitation modes, the absorption frequencies associated with each CPA channel can be independently and continuously tuned. Benefiting from the planar checkerboard configuration, which combines compact geometry, suppressed mutual coupling, and balanced energy distribution, the metasurface achieves stable and independent dual-band absorption characteristics. The proposed design provides a promising pathway for the development of terahertz coherent absorbers with enhanced frequency stability and spectral flexibility of dual-mode operations, offering strong potential for practical photonic and electromagnetic applications. Full article
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20 pages, 4209 KB  
Article
Investigation of Acoustic Resonances Control of a Nose Landing Gear Cavity Using an Acoustic Eigenvalue Solver
by Yifeng Sun, Peiqing Liu, Bréard Cyrille and Hao Guo
Symmetry 2026, 18(3), 494; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym18030494 - 13 Mar 2026
Viewed by 278
Abstract
This study aims to address the acoustic resonance control problem of a three-dimensional nose landing gear (NLG) cavity. We propose a refined numerical approach based on an eigenvalue solver for the Helmholtz equation. A high-order finite element method (FEM) combined with perfectly matched [...] Read more.
This study aims to address the acoustic resonance control problem of a three-dimensional nose landing gear (NLG) cavity. We propose a refined numerical approach based on an eigenvalue solver for the Helmholtz equation. A high-order finite element method (FEM) combined with perfectly matched layer (PML) boundary conditions was employed to accurately capture complex eigenmodes. The radiation damping characteristics of the system were then quantitatively characterized using the quality factor (Q-factor) and resonance frequency. Results indicate that the Helmholtz-type (0,0,0) mode dominates the cavity’s resonance response, with its frequency coinciding with the shear layer-driven Rossiter mode. This study reveals a strong coupling mechanism with the shear-layer-driven Rossiter mode at Mach 0.57, confirming that this interaction is the primary driver of cavity aeroacoustic tonal noise. Taking radiation damping as the core design parameter, a systematic sensitivity analysis was conducted on geometric modifications: aft door length, front door angle, cavity volume, and the introduction of a longitudinal gap. Key findings: shortening the aft door reduces the resonance peak by 8.5 dB; introducing a longitudinal gap with a 10% width reduces the Q-factor by approximately 50%; a combined control strategy (2.5% gap width and 6% cavity volume reduction) achieves 4.9 dB of noise attenuation. Finally, this study establishes a validated acoustic-damping control framework, providing quantitative design criteria and technical guidance for aeroacoustic noise control of NLG cavities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Physics)
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19 pages, 7195 KB  
Article
Design and Deep-Subwavelength Low-Frequency Sound Absorption of a Coplanar Spiral-Varying-Channel Acoustic Metamaterial
by Tao Feng, Qian Zhang, Jing Wang, Biao Yang and Lei Qiu
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(6), 2677; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16062677 - 11 Mar 2026
Viewed by 436
Abstract
This study proposes a novel coplanar spiral-varying-channel space-coiled acoustic metamaterial (CSV-SCAM) for efficient low-frequency noise control in the range of approximately 200–400 Hz. By integrating continuously graded spiral channels with secondary spiral branches, the proposed structure enables multi-stage acoustic impedance matching and enhanced [...] Read more.
This study proposes a novel coplanar spiral-varying-channel space-coiled acoustic metamaterial (CSV-SCAM) for efficient low-frequency noise control in the range of approximately 200–400 Hz. By integrating continuously graded spiral channels with secondary spiral branches, the proposed structure enables multi-stage acoustic impedance matching and enhanced thermo-viscous dissipation, effectively overcoming the bulkiness and limited low-frequency efficiency of conventional porous absorbers. Finite element simulations and impedance tube experiments demonstrate that the CSV-SCAM achieves near-unity deep-subwavelength sound absorption, with a peak sound absorption coefficient exceeding 0.99 around 750–850 Hz using a thickness of only 10 mm. Furthermore, hybrid configurations composed of units with different branch numbers significantly broaden the effective absorption bandwidth by more than 20% while maintaining high absorption levels. Compared with traditional Helmholtz resonators, the proposed metamaterial exhibits superior compactness, structural robustness, and design flexibility, providing a promising solution for practical low-frequency noise mitigation in space-constrained engineering applications. Full article
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30 pages, 3053 KB  
Article
Acoustic–Electrokinetic Coupling for Low-Frequency Energy Harvesting: A Theoretical Framework and Numerical Validation of the Acoustic Baroionic Harvester
by Julio Guerra, Isabel Quinde, Jhonny Barzola and Gerardo Collaguazo
Energies 2026, 19(5), 1150; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19051150 - 25 Feb 2026
Viewed by 544
Abstract
Low-frequency acoustic fields—common in ventilation ducts, building façades, and industrial infrastructure—remain an underutilized source for ambient energy harvesting, particularly in humid environments where conventional contact-based or mechanically resonant harvesters may degrade over time. This study introduces a theoretical framework for converting acoustic pressure [...] Read more.
Low-frequency acoustic fields—common in ventilation ducts, building façades, and industrial infrastructure—remain an underutilized source for ambient energy harvesting, particularly in humid environments where conventional contact-based or mechanically resonant harvesters may degrade over time. This study introduces a theoretical framework for converting acoustic pressure oscillations into electrical power through acoustic–electrokinetic coupling and proposes the Acoustic Baroionic Harvester (ABH) as a solid-state concept combining a Helmholtz resonator with a charged nanoporous membrane. The model is derived from coupled electrokinetic and fluid-mechanical governing relations, leading to closed-form expressions for the open-circuit voltage, internal electrokinetic resistance, and maximum deliverable power as functions of membrane surface charge, electrolyte properties, pore geometry, and resonance-induced pressure amplification. Numerical simulations are performed to validate the analytical scaling laws and to determine operating regimes that maximize power transfer to an external load. Under representative low-frequency acoustic excitation, the ABH predicts open-circuit voltages on the order of tens of millivolts and maximum power densities in the sub-microwatt-per-square-centimeter range. A compact CAD conceptual design tuned to approximately 120 Hz with a moderate resonance quality factor supports the feasibility of practical integration. The proposed approach enables micro-power generation from persistent low-frequency acoustic sources and provides a physically grounded pathway for self-powered sensing applications in built and industrial environments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Energy Harvesting Systems)
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22 pages, 13212 KB  
Article
Multi-Layered Porous Helmholtz Resonators for Low-Frequency and Broadband Sound Absorption
by Xuewei Liu, Tianyu Gu, Ling Li and Dan Wang
Materials 2026, 19(3), 600; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19030600 - 4 Feb 2026
Viewed by 505
Abstract
Unlike classical multi-layered micro-perforated panels (MPPs), which rely on sub-millimeter orifices for sound dissipation, we propose a multi-layered porous Helmholtz resonators absorber. It consists of alternately layered perforated porous material panels and perforated rigid panels with millimeter- to centimeter-scale orifices, primarily relying on [...] Read more.
Unlike classical multi-layered micro-perforated panels (MPPs), which rely on sub-millimeter orifices for sound dissipation, we propose a multi-layered porous Helmholtz resonators absorber. It consists of alternately layered perforated porous material panels and perforated rigid panels with millimeter- to centimeter-scale orifices, primarily relying on porous materials for sound energy dissipation. Theoretically, perforated porous material panels are modeled as homogeneous fluid layers using double porosity theory, and the total surface impedance is derived through bottom-to-top impedance translation. A double-layered prototype was tested to validate the theoretical and numerical models, achieving near-perfect absorption peaks at 262 Hz and 774 Hz, with a subwavelength total thickness of 11 cm and a broadband absorption above an absorption coefficient of 0.7 from 202 Hz to 1076 Hz. Simulations of sound pressure, particle velocity, power dissipation, and sound intensity flow confirm that Helmholtz resonances in each layer enhance sound entry into resistive porous materials, causing absorption peaks. Parameter studies show this absorber maintains high absorption peaks across wide ranges of orifice diameters and panel thicknesses. Finally, an optimized triple-layer porous Helmholtz resonators absorber achieves an ultra-broadband absorption above a coefficient of 0.95 from 280 Hz to 1349 Hz with only 16.5 mm thickness. Compared with conventional MPPs, this design features significantly larger orifices that are easier to fabricate and less susceptible to blockage in harsh environments, offering an alternative solution for low-frequency and broadband sound absorption. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mechanics of Materials)
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12 pages, 2237 KB  
Article
Hybrid Helmholtz–Helical Metamaterial for Broadband-Targeted Suppression of Substation Noise
by Jingkai Nie, Yi Tian, Xing Li, Qiang He, Weichun Huang, Yu Han, Xiaogang Chen and Ming-Hui Lu
Materials 2026, 19(3), 579; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19030579 - 2 Feb 2026
Viewed by 665
Abstract
Low-frequency noise, primarily generated by transformers and electrical machinery in substations, presents considerable environmental and health risks due to its strong penetration and minimal attenuation. Conventional noise control methods often fail to effectively absorb such low-frequency sounds. In response to this challenge, acoustic [...] Read more.
Low-frequency noise, primarily generated by transformers and electrical machinery in substations, presents considerable environmental and health risks due to its strong penetration and minimal attenuation. Conventional noise control methods often fail to effectively absorb such low-frequency sounds. In response to this challenge, acoustic metamaterials featuring unique subwavelength structures have emerged as a promising solution for absorbing low-frequency and broadband noise. This study introduces a novel sound-absorbing metamaterial that integrates parallel-connected Helmholtz resonators with a helical cavity structure. To enhance its performance across a broad frequency range, the metamaterial is optimized using a genetic algorithm. Experimental validation, based on 3D-printed samples and impedance tube measurements, demonstrates high absorption efficiency at target frequencies (100 Hz, 300 Hz, and 500–1300 Hz), with absorption coefficients exceeding 0.9. The results confirm that the metamaterial effectively reduces low-frequency core noise. This work represents a significant advancement in noise control technologies for substations, with broader implications for urban noise mitigation and environmental protection. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Optical and Photonic Materials)
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20 pages, 6646 KB  
Article
A Prototypical Silencer–Resonator Concept Applied to a Heat Pump Mock-Up—Experimental and Numerical Studies
by Sebastian Wagner and Yohko Aoki
Acoustics 2026, 8(1), 6; https://doi.org/10.3390/acoustics8010006 - 27 Jan 2026
Viewed by 642
Abstract
Modern, electrically operated heat pumps are characterized by a high degree of efficiency and represent an attractive alternative to conventional heating systems. However, the noise emissions from heat pumps installed outside can lead to increasing noise pollution in densely populated residential areas, which [...] Read more.
Modern, electrically operated heat pumps are characterized by a high degree of efficiency and represent an attractive alternative to conventional heating systems. However, the noise emissions from heat pumps installed outside can lead to increasing noise pollution in densely populated residential areas, which represents an obstacle to widespread use. As part of a research project, a heat pump mock-up was built based on an outdoor unit in the Fraunhofer IBP. With this mock-up, investigations have now been carried out with a prototypical silencer–resonator concept. The aim was to reduce the sound power on the outlet side of the heat pump mock-up. To estimate the effect of this silencer–resonator concept for heat pumps, FEM simulations were first carried out using COMSOL Multiphysics® with a simplified model. The simulation results validated the silencer–resonator concept for heat pumps and indicated the considerable potential for sound reduction. A measurement was then set up, with which different silencer lengths and absorber thicknesses in the silencer were tested. The measured sound attenuation was higher than the simulated values. The results showed that porous absorbers with sufficient thickness can achieve effective performance in the mid-frequency range. A maximum sound power reduction of 5.7 dB was achieved with the 0.15 m absorber. Additionally, Helmholtz resonators were implemented to attenuate the low-frequency range and tonal peaks. With these resonators sound attenuation was increased to 7.7 dB. Full article
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19 pages, 27717 KB  
Article
Acoustic–Electric Conversion Characteristics of a Quadruple Parallel-Cavity Helmholtz Resonator-Based Triboelectric Nanogenerator (4C–HR TENG)
by Xinjun Li, Chaoming Huang and Zhilin Wang
Processes 2026, 14(2), 341; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14020341 - 18 Jan 2026
Viewed by 502
Abstract
This paper presents the design and fabrication of a triboelectric nanogenerator based on a Quadruple Parallel-cavity Helmholtz Resonator (4C–HR TENG) for the efficient harvesting of noise energy in marine engine room environments. The device utilizes sound waves to drive periodic contact and separation [...] Read more.
This paper presents the design and fabrication of a triboelectric nanogenerator based on a Quadruple Parallel-cavity Helmholtz Resonator (4C–HR TENG) for the efficient harvesting of noise energy in marine engine room environments. The device utilizes sound waves to drive periodic contact and separation between polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) particles in the resonant cavity and the vibrating diaphragm as well as the upper electrode plate, thereby converting sound energy into mechanical energy and finally into electrical energy. The device consists of an acoustic waveguide with a length of 350 mm and both width and height of 60 mm, along with a Helmholtz Resonator with a diameter of 60 mm and a height of 40 mm. Experimental results indicate that under resonance conditions with a sound pressure level of 109.8 dB and a frequency of 110 Hz, the device demonstrates excellent output performance, achieving a peak output voltage of 250 V and a current of 4.85 μA. We analyzed and investigated the influence mechanism of key parameters (filling ratio, sound pressure level, the height between the electrode plates, and particle size) on the output performance. Through COMSOL Multiphysics simulation analysis, the sound pressure enhancement effect and the characteristic of concentrated diaphragm center displacement at the first-order resonance frequency were revealed, verifying the advantage of the four-cavity structure in terms of energy distribution uniformity. In practical applications, the minimum responsive sound pressure level corresponding to the operating frequency range of the 4C–HR TENG was determined. The output power reaches a maximum of 0.27 mW at a load resistance of 50 MΩ. At a sound pressure level of 115.1 dB, the device can charge a 1 μF capacitor to 4.73 V in just 32 s and simultaneously illuminate 180 LEDs in real-time, demonstrating its potential for environmental noise energy harvesting and micro-energy supply applications. This study provides new insights and experimental evidence for the efficient recovery of noise energy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Energy Systems)
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21 pages, 6409 KB  
Article
Numerical Study on Oil Particle Enrichment in a Rectangular Microfluidic Channel Based on Acoustic Standing Waves
by Zhenzhen Liu, Jingrui Wang, Yong Cai, Yan Liu, Xiaolei Hu and Haoran Yan
Micromachines 2026, 17(1), 79; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17010079 - 7 Jan 2026
Viewed by 493
Abstract
This study presents a method for enriching oil-suspended particles within a rectangular microfluidic channel using acoustic standing waves. A modified Helmholtz equation is solved to establish the acoustic field model, and the equilibrium between acoustic radiation forces and viscous drag is described by [...] Read more.
This study presents a method for enriching oil-suspended particles within a rectangular microfluidic channel using acoustic standing waves. A modified Helmholtz equation is solved to establish the acoustic field model, and the equilibrium between acoustic radiation forces and viscous drag is described by combining Gor’kov potential theory with the Stokes drag model. Based on this force balance, the particle motion equation is derived, enabling the determination of the critical particle size necessary for efficient enrichment in oil-filled microchannels. A two-dimensional standing-wave microchannel model is subsequently developed, and the influences of acoustic, fluidic, and particle parameters on particle migration and aggregation are systematically investigated through theoretical analysis and numerical simulations. The results indicate that when the channel dimension and acoustic wavelength satisfy the half-wavelength resonance condition, a stable standing-wave field forms, effectively focusing suspended particles at the acoustic pressure nodes. Enrichment efficiency is found to be strongly dependent on inlet flow velocity, particle diameter, acoustic frequency, temperature, and particle density. Lower flow velocities and larger particle sizes result in higher enrichment efficiencies, with the most uniform and stable pressure distribution achieved when the acoustic frequency matches the resonant channel width. Increases in temperature and particle density enhance the acoustic radiation force, thereby accelerating the aggregation of particles. These findings offer theoretical foundations and practical insights for acoustically assisted online monitoring of wear particles in lubricating oils, contributing to advanced condition assessment and fault diagnosis in mechanical systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Development of Micro/Nanofluidic Devices, 2nd Edition)
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15 pages, 2814 KB  
Article
Simultaneous Broadband Sound Absorption and Vibration Suppression in Gradient-Symmetric Multilayer Metamaterials
by Hanbo Shao, Yichao Yang, Wentao Di, Hanqi Zhang and Dong Jiang
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(23), 12628; https://doi.org/10.3390/app152312628 - 28 Nov 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 854
Abstract
Metamaterials show perfect physics characteristics for controlling elastic wave propagation. Their potential offers a lot of useful applications in low-frequency sound absorption and vibration reduction systems. However, traditional materials have inherent deficiencies in terms of functionality. There are a few designs in both [...] Read more.
Metamaterials show perfect physics characteristics for controlling elastic wave propagation. Their potential offers a lot of useful applications in low-frequency sound absorption and vibration reduction systems. However, traditional materials have inherent deficiencies in terms of functionality. There are a few designs in both acoustic and solid-mechanics domains that simultaneously exhibit sound attenuation bands and vibration bandgaps. The question poses new challenges for metamaterial development. To address this, we propose a gradient-symmetric multilayered metamaterial. The structure is capable of concurrent sound and vibration absorption. First, we established an acoustic model based on Helmholtz resonators and a vibration model by spring-mass systems. This model can predict the sound attenuation frequencies and natural frequency positions accurately. Second, through a combined simulation and experimental approach, we investigated how variations in the number of structural layers affect sound attenuation bandwidth. In addition, we analyzed the mechanisms of sound pressure distribution inside and outside the bandgaps. Finally, we elucidated the influence of lattice constants on vibration bandgap positions, demonstrating possibilities for passive control of metamaterials. This research provides robust support for the dynamic design of acoustic and mechanical metamaterials, structural modeling methodologies, bandwidth regulation strategies, and the development of sound-absorbing and vibration-damping devices. Full article
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10 pages, 11154 KB  
Article
Metasurface Lossless-Regulation Mechanism of Dynamic Acoustic Mass for Low-Frequency Aerodynamic Noise Control
by Min Li and Jiuhui Wu
Materials 2025, 18(22), 5095; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18225095 - 10 Nov 2025
Viewed by 657
Abstract
To solve the problem of low-frequency aerodynamic noise control of Helmholtz resonators (HR) due to the frequency shift and amplitude reduction in acoustic attenuation caused by increasing fluid flow, the lossless regulation mechanism of the dynamic acoustic mass of a novel embedded-neck Helmholtz [...] Read more.
To solve the problem of low-frequency aerodynamic noise control of Helmholtz resonators (HR) due to the frequency shift and amplitude reduction in acoustic attenuation caused by increasing fluid flow, the lossless regulation mechanism of the dynamic acoustic mass of a novel embedded-neck Helmholtz resonator (ENHR) metasurface is revealed through finite element simulation and wind tunnel experiments. Firstly, the flow–acoustic coupling aerodynamic simulation model based on the ducted silencer system is established. Then, the physical mechanism of lossless regulation of the dynamic acoustic mass for low-frequency aerodynamic noise reduction under incident fluid flow is studied specifically. Finally, a sub-wavelength and larger broadband ENHR metasurface comprising ten parallel cells is designed, in which an average transmission loss (TL) of 18.7 dB within 70–200 Hz with a Mach number (Ma) of 0.05 is achieved. The lossless regulation mechanism of dynamic acoustic mass with metasurface design would have an extensive potential application value in controlling low-frequency aerodynamic noise. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Materials Physics)
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15 pages, 2294 KB  
Article
Sound-Absorbing Thermoplastic Composite with Helmholtz Resonance
by Eulalia Gliścińska, Marina Michalak and Anna Michalak
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(21), 11349; https://doi.org/10.3390/app152111349 - 23 Oct 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1039
Abstract
This work concerns a thermoplastic composite manufactured by thermal pressing of a nonwoven layered system. The composite structure consists of two layers: a thicker porous fibrous/plastic layer that responds to sound absorption and a thinner, rigid polymer (plastic) layer on the outside, enhancing [...] Read more.
This work concerns a thermoplastic composite manufactured by thermal pressing of a nonwoven layered system. The composite structure consists of two layers: a thicker porous fibrous/plastic layer that responds to sound absorption and a thinner, rigid polymer (plastic) layer on the outside, enhancing sound absorption at selected frequencies. The novelty of this work is the creation of two interconnected holes of different diameters in a real fibrous composite, passing through both composite layers, acting as the neck and cavity of a Helmholtz resonator. Both the neck and the cavity are located within the composite structure, creating the shape of interconnected cylinders. The sound absorption of a composite with a varying neck diameter and a constant cavity diameter was studied using an impedance tube. The effect of the neck diameter on the resonant frequency and the corresponding sound absorption value was investigated. For various neck diameter variants, the resonant frequency was calculated using not constant, but a variable effective neck length. To achieve this, appropriate neck length corrections have been made for each neck diameter. The experimental results are consistent with the calculated results. These studies show that based on the relationship between the resonant frequency and the resonator neck diameter determined for a given composite, the resonant frequency (absorption peak) can be controlled by changing the neck diameter. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Research on Polymer Composite Materials)
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16 pages, 7795 KB  
Article
Enhancing Helmholtz Resonance Prediction in Acoustic Barriers Based on Sonic Crystals
by Lucas Onrubia-Fontangordo, José María Bravo Plana-Sala, Juan Vicente Sánchez-Pérez and Sergio Castiñeira-Ibáñez
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(19), 10675; https://doi.org/10.3390/app151910675 - 2 Oct 2025
Viewed by 1036
Abstract
Environmental noise is a growing public health issue, particularly in dense urban environments and areas adjacent to transport infrastructure. Passive acoustic barriers have been a widely adopted solution, although their functional and aesthetic limitations have driven the development of alternatives, such as Sonic [...] Read more.
Environmental noise is a growing public health issue, particularly in dense urban environments and areas adjacent to transport infrastructure. Passive acoustic barriers have been a widely adopted solution, although their functional and aesthetic limitations have driven the development of alternatives, such as Sonic Crystal Acoustic Barriers. These structures can incorporate resonant elements, such as Helmholtz cavities, with the aim of enhancing attenuation in particular frequency bands. However, determining the precise dimensions of these resonators is a persistent challenge, given that classical models are based on ideal geometries and do not incorporate interaction with the periodic structural environment. This study sets a new frequency-dependent correction factor, obtained both numerically and experimentally, which allows the classical Helmholtz resonance expression to be adjusted to the case of resonators embedded in a Sonic Crystal (SC). The proposed model is validated through simulations and experimental measurements, showing a significant improvement in the prediction of the resonance frequency. The results obtained in this study allow us to move towards a more efficient and realistic design of passive acoustic barriers that are lightweight and adaptable to the urban environment. Full article
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19 pages, 4700 KB  
Article
Prototyping and Evaluation of 1D Cylindrical and MEMS-Based Helmholtz Acoustic Resonators for Ultra-Sensitive CO2 Gas Sensing
by Ananya Srivastava, Rohan Sonar, Achim Bittner and Alfons Dehé
Gases 2025, 5(3), 21; https://doi.org/10.3390/gases5030021 - 9 Sep 2025
Viewed by 4629
Abstract
This work presents a proof of concept including simulation and experimental validations of acoustic gas sensor prototypes for trace CO2 detection up to 1 ppm. For the detection of lower gas concentrations especially, the dependency of acoustic resonances on the molecular weights [...] Read more.
This work presents a proof of concept including simulation and experimental validations of acoustic gas sensor prototypes for trace CO2 detection up to 1 ppm. For the detection of lower gas concentrations especially, the dependency of acoustic resonances on the molecular weights and, consequently, the speed of sound of the gas mixture, is exploited. We explored two resonator types: a cylindrical acoustic resonator and a Helmholtz resonator intrinsic to the MEMS microphone’s geometry. Both systems utilized mass flow controllers (MFCs) for precise gas mixing and were also modeled in COMSOL Multiphysics 6.2 to simulate resonance shifts based on thermodynamic properties of binary gas mixtures, in this case, N2-CO2. We performed experimental tracking using Zurich Instruments MFIA, with high-resolution frequency shifts observed in µHz and mHz ranges in both setups. A compact and geometry-independent nature of MEMS-based Helmholtz tracking showed clear potential for scalable sensor designs. Multiple experimental trials confirmed the reproducibility and stability of both configurations, thus providing a robust basis for statistical validation and system reliability assessment. The good simulation experiment agreement, especially in frequency shift trends and gas density, supports the method’s viability for scalable environmental and industrial gas sensing applications. This resonance tracking system offers high sensitivity and flexibility, allowing selective detection of low CO2 concentrations down to 1 ppm. By further exploiting both external and intrinsic acoustic resonances, the system enables highly sensitive, multi-modal sensing with minimal hardware modifications. At microscopic scales, gas detection is influenced by ambient factors like temperature and humidity, which are monitored here in a laboratory setting via NDIR sensors. A key challenge is that different gas mixtures with similar sound speeds can cause indistinguishable frequency shifts. To address this, machine learning-based multivariate gas analysis can be employed. This would, in addition to the acoustic properties of the gases as one of the variables, also consider other gas-specific variables such as absorption, molecular properties, and spectroscopic signatures, reducing cross-sensitivity and improving selectivity. This multivariate sensing approach holds potential for future application and validation with more critical gas species. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Gas Sensors)
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