Acoustic metasurfaces are at the frontier of acoustic functional material research owing to their advanced capabilities of wave manipulation at an acoustically vanishing size. Despite significant progress in the last decade, conventional acoustic metasurfaces are still fundamentally limited by their underlying physics and design principles. First, conventional metasurfaces assume that unit cells are decoupled and therefore treat them individually during the design process. Owing to diffraction, however, the non-locality of the wave field could strongly affect the efficiency and even alter the behavior of acoustic metasurfaces. Additionally, conventional acoustic metasurfaces operate by modulating the phase and are typically treated as lossless systems. Due to the narrow regions in acoustic metasurfaces' subwavelength unit cells, however, losses are naturally present and could compromise the performance of acoustic metasurfaces. While the conventional wisdom is to minimize these effects, a counter-intuitive way of thinking has emerged, which is to harness the non-locality as well as loss for enhanced acoustic metasurface functionality. This has led to a new generation of acoustic metasurface design paradigm that is empowered by non-locality and non-Hermicity, providing new routes for controlling sound using the acoustic version of 2D materials. This review details the progress of non-local and non-Hermitian acoustic metasurfaces, providing an overview of the recent acoustic metasurface designs and discussing the critical role of non-locality and loss in acoustic metasurfaces. We further outline the synergy between non-locality and non-Hermiticity, and delineate the potential of using non-local and non-Hermitian acoustic metasurfaces as a new platform for investigating exceptional points, the hallmark of non-Hermitian physics. Finally, the current challenges and future outlook for this burgeoning field are discussed.
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Nanophotonics
January 2025
Instituto de Micro y Nanotecnología IMN-CNM, CSIC, CEI UAM+CSIC, Tres Cantos, Spain.
Acoustoplasmonic resonators, such as nanobars and crosses, are efficient acousto-optical transducers. The excitation of mechanical modes in these structures strongly depends on the spatial profile of the eigenmodes of the resonator. Using a system of two identical gold elongated bars placed on a silicon dioxide substrate, we examine how breaking mirror symmetries affects the optical and acoustic properties to provide insights in the design of acoustoplasmonic metasurfaces for nonsymmetric acousto-optical transducers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
January 2025
Bio-Acoustic MEMS in Medicine (BAMM) Lab, Canary Center at Stanford, Department of Radiology, School of Medicine, Stanford University, California, CA, USA.
Particle manipulation plays a pivotal role in scientific and technological domains such as materials science, physics, and the life sciences. Here, we present a dynamically reconfigurable acoustofluidic metasurface that enables precise trapping and positioning of microscale particles in fluidic environments. By harnessing acoustic-structure interaction in a passive membrane resonator array, we generate localized standing acoustic waves that can be reconfigured in real-time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
January 2025
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore.
Flat bands have empowered novel phenomena such as robust canalization with strong localization, high-collimation and low-loss propagation. However, the spatial symmetry protection in photonic or acoustic lattices naturally forces flat bands to manifest in pairs aligned at an inherently specific angle, resulting in a fixed bidirectional canalization. Here, we report an acoustic flat-band metasurface, allowing not only unidirectional canalization at all in-plane angles but also robust tunability in band alignment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
December 2024
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University at Buffalo (State University of New York), Buffalo, NY 14260-4400.
Decades after being replaced with digital platforms, analogue computing has experienced a surging interest following developments in metamaterials and intricate fabrication techniques. Specifically, wave-based analogue computers which impart spatial transformations on an incident wavefront, commensurate with a desired mathematical operation, have gained traction owing to their ability to directly encode the input in its unprocessed form, bypassing analogue-to-digital conversion. While promising, these systems are inherently limited to single-task configurations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLab Chip
January 2025
College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Nanjing University, Jiangsu 210093, China.
Acoustic waves provide an effective method for object manipulation in microfluidics, often requiring high-frequency ultrasound in the megahertz range when directly handling microsized objects, which can be costly. Micro-air-bubbles in water offer a solution toward low-cost technologies using low-frequency acoustic waves. Owing to their high compressibility and low elastic modulus, these bubbles can exhibit significant expansion and contraction in response to even kilohertz acoustic waves, leading to resonances with frequencies determined and tuned by air-bubble size.
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