Inspired by the discoveries of electronic topological phases and topological insulators, topologically protected boundary states in classical wave-based systems have attracted considerable interest in the last decade. Most recently, acoustic higher-order topological insulators and Kekulé-distorted sonic lattices have been proposed to support topological corner states and zero-dimensional bound states. Here, we demonstrate a domain wall induced topological corner state that is bound at the crossing point among finite acoustic graphenelike crystals. The approach is based on designing multipolar pseudospin resonances, which give rise to topologically trivial and nontrivial transitions across the domain walls that flank this unusual corner excitation toward the crossing point. By deliberately adding a substantial amount of defects into the cavities of the sonic lattice, we find that the pseudospin induced topological corner state remains entirely unaffected and pinned spectrally to the complete audible band gap. Our findings may thus have the potential to broaden the possibilities for sound confinement and focusing.
Multiplexing technology with increased information capacity plays a crucial role in the realm of acoustic communication. Different quantities of sound waves, including time, frequency, amplitude, phase, and orbital angular momentum (OAM), have been independently introduced as the physical multiplexing approach to allow for enhanced communication densities. An acoustic metasurface is decorated with carbon nanotube patches, which when electrically pumped and set to rotate, functions as a hybrid mode‐frequency‐division multiplexer with synthetic dimensions. Based on this spatiotemporal modulation, a superposition of vortex beams with orthogonal OAMs and symmetric harmonics are both numerically and experimentally demonstrated. Also, flexible combinations of OAM modes with diverse frequency shifts are obtained by transforming the azimuthal phase distributions, which inspires a mode‐frequency‐division multiplexing approach that significantly promotes the communication capacity.
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