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Keywords = elastic cloaking

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12 pages, 3036 KB  
Article
Shock Wave Formation and Cloaking in Hyperelastic Rods
by Sergey V. Kuznetsov
Appl. Sci. 2023, 13(8), 4740; https://doi.org/10.3390/app13084740 - 10 Apr 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2299
Abstract
The analysis of propagating an initially harmonic acoustic pulse in a semi-infinite hyperelastic rod obeying the Yeoh strain energy potential reveals attenuation with distance of the wave amplitudes caused by the elastic energy dissipation due to forming and propagation of the shock wave [...] Read more.
The analysis of propagating an initially harmonic acoustic pulse in a semi-infinite hyperelastic rod obeying the Yeoh strain energy potential reveals attenuation with distance of the wave amplitudes caused by the elastic energy dissipation due to forming and propagation of the shock wave fronts and heat production. The observed attenuation of harmonic waves results in a broadband cloaking of fairly remote regions. The analysis is based on solving a nonlinear equation of motion by an explicit Lax–Wendroff time-difference scheme combined with the finite element discretization in the spatial domain. The revealing phenomena are applicable to studies of acoustic wave propagation in various elastomeric rubberlike materials modeled by the Yeoh hyperelastic potentials. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Acoustics and Vibrations)
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14 pages, 5113 KB  
Article
Mechanically Stable Magnetic Metallic Materials for Biomedical Applications
by Shahid Mehmood, Zahid Ali, Shah Rukh Khan, Salma Aman, Ashraf Y. Elnaggar, Mohamed M. Ibrahim, Tatiana I. Zubar, Daria I. Tishkevich, Sergei V. Trukhanov and Alex V. Trukhanov
Materials 2022, 15(22), 8009; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15228009 - 12 Nov 2022
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 2374
Abstract
The structural, electrical, and magneto-elastic properties of lanthanide base nitride (Ln = Dy-Lu) anti-perovskites were investigated using density functional theory (DFT). The reported structural outcomes are consistent with the experiment and decrease from Dy to Lu due to the decrease ofatomic radii of [...] Read more.
The structural, electrical, and magneto-elastic properties of lanthanide base nitride (Ln = Dy-Lu) anti-perovskites were investigated using density functional theory (DFT). The reported structural outcomes are consistent with the experiment and decrease from Dy to Lu due to the decrease ofatomic radii of Ln atoms. According to the electronic band profile, the metallic characteristics of these compounds are due to the crossing over of Ln-f states at the Fermi level and are also supported by electrical resistivity. The resistivity of these compounds at room temperature demonstrates that they are good conductors. Their mechanical stability, anisotropic, load-bearing, and malleable nature are demonstrated by their elastic properties. Due to their metallic and load-bearing nature, in addition to their ductility, these materials are suitable as active biomaterials, especially when significant acting loads are anticipated, such as those experienced by such heavily loaded implants as hip and knee endo-prostheses, plates, screws, nails, dental implants, etc. In thesecases, appropriate bending fatigue strength is required in structural materials for skeletal reconstruction. Magnetic properties show that all compounds are G-type anti-ferromagnetic, with the Neel temperatures ranging from 24 to 48 K, except Lu3Nin, which is non-magnetic. Due to their anti-ferromagnetic structure, magnetic probes cannot read data contained in anti-ferromagnetic moments, therefore, data will be unchanged by disrupted magnetic field. As a result, these compounds can be the best candidates for magnetic cloaking devices. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Theory and Simulations of Magnetic Materials)
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15 pages, 8767 KB  
Article
Trapped Modes and Negative Refraction in a Locally Resonant Metamaterial: Transient Insights into Manufacturing Bounds for Ultrasonic Applications
by Domenico Tallarico and Stewart G. Haslinger
Appl. Sci. 2021, 11(16), 7576; https://doi.org/10.3390/app11167576 - 18 Aug 2021
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2363
Abstract
The transient scattering of in-plane elastic waves from a finite-sized periodic structure, comprising a regular grid of Swiss-cross holes arranged according to a square lattice, is considered. The theoretical and numerical modelling focuses on the unexplored ultrasonic frequency regime, well beyond the first, [...] Read more.
The transient scattering of in-plane elastic waves from a finite-sized periodic structure, comprising a regular grid of Swiss-cross holes arranged according to a square lattice, is considered. The theoretical and numerical modelling focuses on the unexplored ultrasonic frequency regime, well beyond the first, wide, locally resonant band-gap of the structure. Dispersive properties of the periodic array, determined by Bloch–Floquet analysis, are used to identify candidates for high-fidelity GPU-accelerated transient scattering simulations. Several unusual wave phenomena are identified from the simulations, including negative refraction, focusing, partial cloaking, and wave trapping. The transient finite element modelling framework offers insights on the lifetimes of such phenomena for potential practical applications. In addition, nonideal counterparts with rough edges are modelled using characteristic statistical parameters commonly observed in additive manufacturing. The analysis shows that the identified wave effects appear likely to be robust with respect to potential manufacturing uncertainties in future studies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Elastic Micro-Structured Systems and Metamaterials)
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13 pages, 1859 KB  
Article
Effect of HIT Components on the Development of Breast Cancer Cells
by Li-Yu Chen, Gurunath Apte, Annerose Lindenbauer, Marion Frant and Thi-Huong Nguyen
Life 2021, 11(8), 832; https://doi.org/10.3390/life11080832 - 13 Aug 2021
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3642
Abstract
Cancer cells circulating in blood vessels activate platelets, forming a cancer cell encircling platelet cloak which facilitates cancer metastasis. Heparin (H) is frequently used as an anticoagulant in cancer patients but up to 5% of patients have a side effect, heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) [...] Read more.
Cancer cells circulating in blood vessels activate platelets, forming a cancer cell encircling platelet cloak which facilitates cancer metastasis. Heparin (H) is frequently used as an anticoagulant in cancer patients but up to 5% of patients have a side effect, heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) that can be life-threatening. HIT is developed due to a complex interaction among multiple components including heparin, platelet factor 4 (PF4), HIT antibodies, and platelets. However, available information regarding the effect of HIT components on cancers is limited. Here, we investigated the effect of these materials on the mechanical property of breast cancer cells using atomic force microscopy (AFM) while cell spreading was quantified by confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM), and cell proliferation rate was determined. Over time, we found a clear effect of each component on cell elasticity and cell spreading. In the absence of platelets, HIT antibodies inhibited cell proliferation but they promoted cell proliferation in the presence of platelets. Our results indicate that HIT complexes influenced the development of breast cancer cells. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Mechanical Forces in the Cell)
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10 pages, 5571 KB  
Article
Cloaking In-Plane Elastic Waves with Swiss Rolls
by Younes Achaoui, André Diatta, Muamer Kadic and Sébastien Guenneau
Materials 2020, 13(2), 449; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13020449 - 17 Jan 2020
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 3837
Abstract
We propose a design of cylindrical cloak for coupled in-plane shear waves consisting of concentric layers of sub-wavelength resonant stress-free inclusions shaped as Swiss rolls. The scaling factor between inclusions’ sizes is according to Pendry’s transform. Unlike the hitherto known situations, the present [...] Read more.
We propose a design of cylindrical cloak for coupled in-plane shear waves consisting of concentric layers of sub-wavelength resonant stress-free inclusions shaped as Swiss rolls. The scaling factor between inclusions’ sizes is according to Pendry’s transform. Unlike the hitherto known situations, the present geometric transform starts from a Willis medium and further assumes that displacement fields u in original medium and u in transformed medium remain unaffected ( u = u ). This breaks the minor symmetries of the rank-4 and rank-3 tensors in the Willis equation that describe the transformed effective medium. We achieve some cloaking for a shear polarized source at specific, resonant sub-wavelength, frequencies, when it is located in close proximity to a clamped obstacle surrounded by the structured cloak. The structured medium approximating the effective medium allows for strong Willis coupling, notwithstanding potential chiral elastic effects, and thus mitigates roles of Willis and Cosserat media in the achieved elastodynamic cloaking. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Mechanical Metamaterials)
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23 pages, 15650 KB  
Review
Recent Advances in Non-Traditional Elastic Wave Manipulation by Macroscopic Artificial Structures
by Jeonghoon Park, Dongwoo Lee and Junsuk Rho
Appl. Sci. 2020, 10(2), 547; https://doi.org/10.3390/app10020547 - 11 Jan 2020
Cited by 43 | Viewed by 10323
Abstract
Metamaterials are composed of arrays of subwavelength-sized artificial structures; these architectures give rise to novel characteristics that can be exploited to manipulate electromagnetic waves and acoustic waves. They have been also used to manipulate elastic waves, but such waves have a coupling property, [...] Read more.
Metamaterials are composed of arrays of subwavelength-sized artificial structures; these architectures give rise to novel characteristics that can be exploited to manipulate electromagnetic waves and acoustic waves. They have been also used to manipulate elastic waves, but such waves have a coupling property, so metamaterials for elastic waves uses a different method than for electromagnetic and acoustic waves. Since researches on this type of metamaterials is sparse, this paper reviews studies that used elastic materials to manipulate elastic waves, and introduces applications using extraordinary characteristics induced by metamaterials. Bragg scattering and local resonances have been exploited to introduce a locally resonant elastic metamaterial, a gradient-index lens, a hyperlens, and elastic cloaking. The principles and applications of metasurfaces that can overcome the disadvantages of bulky elastic metamaterials are discussed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Nanotechnology and Applied Nanosciences)
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8 pages, 1429 KB  
Article
Stiffer, Stronger and Centrosymmetrical Class of Pentamodal Mechanical Metamaterials
by Yan Huang, Xiaozhe Zhang, Muamer Kadic and Gongying Liang
Materials 2019, 12(21), 3470; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma12213470 - 23 Oct 2019
Cited by 18 | Viewed by 3560
Abstract
Pentamode metamaterials have been used as a crucial element to achieve elastical unfeelability cloaking devices. They are seen as potentially fragile and not simple for integration in anisotropic structures due to a non-centrosymmetric crystalline structure. Here, we introduce a new class of pentamode [...] Read more.
Pentamode metamaterials have been used as a crucial element to achieve elastical unfeelability cloaking devices. They are seen as potentially fragile and not simple for integration in anisotropic structures due to a non-centrosymmetric crystalline structure. Here, we introduce a new class of pentamode metamaterial with centrosymmetry, which shows better performances regarding stiffness, toughness, stability and size dependence. The phonon band structure is calculated based on the finite element method, and the pentamodal properties are evaluated by analyzing the single band gap and the ratio of bulk and shear modulus. The Poisson’s ratio becomes isotropic and close to 0.5 in the limit of small double-cone connections. Stability and scalability analysis results show that the critical load factor of this structure is obviously higher than the classical pentamode structure under the same static elastic properties, and the Young’s modulus gradually converges to a stable value (the infinite case) with an increasing number of unit cells. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Mechanical Metamaterials)
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10 pages, 1000 KB  
Article
Robustness of Acoustic Scattering Cancellation to Parameter Variations
by Claudia Guattari, Paola Gori, Roberto De Lieto Vollaro, Luca Evangelisti, Gabriele Battista, Carmine Basilicata, Alessandro Toscano and Filiberto Bilotti
Sustainability 2014, 6(7), 4416-4425; https://doi.org/10.3390/su6074416 - 16 Jul 2014
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 5773
Abstract
This contribution aims at investigating the possibility to cloak a spherical object from an acoustic wave by applying the scattering cancellation approach. In electromagnetism, the scattering problem is treated using the Mie expansion technique, through which the scattered field by a spherical object [...] Read more.
This contribution aims at investigating the possibility to cloak a spherical object from an acoustic wave by applying the scattering cancellation approach. In electromagnetism, the scattering problem is treated using the Mie expansion technique, through which the scattered field by a spherical object can be represented as a superposition of TE and TM spherical harmonics. It is possible to extend this concept to the acoustic field by defining an analogous approach; the pressure field, generated by an elastic wave impinging on a spherical object, can be expressed applying the Mie expansion technique, as well. In acoustics, to achieve scattering suppression at a given frequency, the constitutive parameters to control are density and compressibility. By varying these parameter values, it is possible to define an engineered material with anomalous properties, which cannot be found in nature, able to reduce the scattering cross-section (SCS) from a spherical object. We propose a study about the effectiveness of the SCS reduction from an elastic sphere coated with a properly-designed acoustic metamaterial. The sensitivity of the SCS to parameter variations is analyzed for different coating thicknesses and sphere dimensions. Our analysis is supported by both the analytical modelling of the structure and numerical simulations. Full article
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