- Series
- GT-MAP Seminar
- Time
- Friday, February 17, 2017 - 3:00pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 006
- Speaker
- Prof. Alper Erturk – GT Mechanical Engineering – http://www.ssdsl.gatech.edu/people/erturk
- Organizer
- Sung Ha Kang
The first part of this talk will review our
recent efforts on the electroelastodynamics of smart structures for
various applications ranging from nonlinear energy harvesting,
bio-inspired actuation, and acoustic power transfer to elastic wave
guiding and vibration attenuation via metamaterials. We will discuss
how to exploit nonlinear dynamic phenomena for frequency bandwidth
enhancement to outperform narrowband linear-resonant devices in
applications such as vibration energy harvesting for wireless
electronic components. We will also cover inherent nonlinearities
(material and internal/external dissipative), and their interactions
with intentionally designed nonlinearities, as well as electrical
circuit nonlinearities. Electromechanical modeling efforts will be
presented, and approximate analysis results using the method of
harmonic balance will be compared with experimental measurements. Our
recent efforts on phononic crystal-enhanced elastic wave guiding and
harvesting, wideband vibration attenuation via locally resonant
metamaterials, contactless acoustic power transfer, bifurcation
suppression using nonlinear circuits, and exploiting size effects via
strain-gradient induced polarization (flexoelectricity) in
centrosymmetric elastic dielectrics will be summarized.
The second part of the talk, which will be given by Chris Sugino (Research Assistant and PhD Student), will be
centered on low-frequency vibration attenuation in finite structures
by means of locally resonant elastic and electroelastic
metamaterials. Locally
resonant metamaterials are characterized by bandgaps at wavelengths
that are much larger than the lattice size, enabling low-frequency
vibration/sound attenuation. Typically, bandgap analyses and
predictions rely on the assumption of waves traveling in an infinite
medium, and do not take advantage of modal representations commonly
used for the analysis of the dynamic behavior of finite structures.
We will present a novel argument for estimating the locally resonant
bandgap in metamaterial-based finite structures (i.e. meta-structures
with prescribed boundary conditions) using modal analysis, yielding a
simple closed-form expression for the bandgap frequency and size. A
method for understanding the importance of the resonator locations
and mass distribution will be discussed in the context of a Riemann
sum approximation of an integral. Numerical
and experimental results will be presented regarding the effects of
mass ratio, non-uniform spacing of resonators, and parameter
variations among the resonators. Electromechanical
counterpart of the problem will also be summarized for piezoelectric
structures.