Electro-momentum coupling tailored in piezoelectric metamaterials with resonant shunts

Local microstructural heterogeneities of elastic metamaterials give rise to non-local macroscopic cross coupling between stress–strain and momentum–velocity, known as Willis coupling. Recent advances have revealed that symmetry breaking in piezoelectric metamaterials introduces an additional macrosc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hrishikesh Danawe, Serife Tol
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIP Publishing LLC 2023-09-01
Series:APL Materials
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0165267
Description
Summary:Local microstructural heterogeneities of elastic metamaterials give rise to non-local macroscopic cross coupling between stress–strain and momentum–velocity, known as Willis coupling. Recent advances have revealed that symmetry breaking in piezoelectric metamaterials introduces an additional macroscopic cross coupling effect, termed electro-momentum coupling, linking electrical stimulus and momentum and enabling the emergence of exotic wave phenomena characteristic of Willis materials. The electro-momentum coupling provides an extra degree of freedom for controlling elastic wave propagation in piezoelectric composites through external electrical stimuli. In this study, we present how to tune the electro-momentum coupling arising in 1D periodic piezoelectric metamaterials with broken inversion symmetry through shunting the inherent capacitance of the individual piezoelectric layers with a resistor and an inductor in series forming a resistor–inductor–capacitor circuit. Guided by the effective elastodynamic theory and homogenization method for piezoelectric metamaterials, we derived a closed-form expression of the electro-momentum coupling in shunted piezoelectric metamaterials. Moreover, we demonstrate the ability to tailor the electro-momentum coupling coefficient and control the amplitudes and phases of the forward and backward propagating waves, yielding tunable asymmetric wave responses. The results of our study hold promising implications for applications involving asymmetric wave phenomena and programmable metamaterials.
ISSN:2166-532X