Experiments on ultrasound propagation through a gel doped with resonant encapsulated microbubbles provided evidence for a discontinuous transition between wave propagation regimes at a critical excitation frequency. Such behavior is unlike that observed for soft materials doped with non-resonant air or through liquid foams, and disagrees with a simple mixture model for the effective sound speed. Here, we study the discontinuous transition by measuring the transition as a function of encapsulated microbubble volume fraction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA material's acoustic properties depend critically upon porosity. Doping a soft material with gas-filled microballoons permits a controlled variation of the porosity through a scalable fabrication process while generating well-tailored spherical cavities that are impermeable to liquids. However, evidence is lacking of how the nanometer-scale polymeric shell contributes to the overall effective material properties in the regime where the wavelength is comparable to the sample thickness.
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