posted on 2010-11-16, 16:55authored byE.P. Bowyer, Daniel O'BoyDaniel O'Boy, Victor V. Krylov, F. Gautier
In the present paper, we report the results of the experimental investigation of damping flexural vibrations
in rectangular plates containing tapered indentations (pits) of power-law profile, with the addition of a
small amount of absorbing material. In the case of quadratic or higher-order profiles, such indentations
materialise two-dimensional ‘black holes’ for flexural waves. In the present investigation, pits have been
made in different locations of rectangular plates. It has been found that basic power-law indentations that
are just protruding over the opposite surface cause rather small reduction in resonant peak amplitudes,
which may be due to their relatively small absorption crossection. To increase damping in the present
investigation, the absorption crossection has been enlarged by increasing the size of the central hole in the
pit, while keeping the edges sharp. As expected, such pits, being in fact curved power-law wedges, result
in substantially increased damping comparable with that achieved by one-dimensional wedges of powerlaw
profile.
History
School
Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering
Department
Aeronautical and Automotive Engineering
Citation
BOWYER, E.P. ... et al, 2010. Experimental investigation of damping flexural vibrations using two-dimensional acoustic ‘black holes’. IN: Sas, P. and Bergen, B. (eds.). Proceedings of the International Conference on Noise and Vibration Engineering (ISMA 2010), Leuven, Belgium, 20-22 September 2010, pp.1181-1192.