Guided wave-based nondestructive testing and structural health monitoring methods have been developed to exhibit attractive potentials and best prospects for rapid and sensitive detection of defects or damage in engineering structures. Different modes of guided waves can provide different sensitivities of damage detection. However, the multimode and mode conversion nature of guided waves poses significant challenges to mode purification of received signals. This study aims to design a metamaterial-based smart transducer for mode purification of Lamb waves in a plate, which can filter out an undesired mode of the Lamb wave to enhance sensing and actuating signals of a dominated mode. The smart transducer consists of a periodic array of shunted piezoelectric unimorphs with staggered polarization directions and is bonded on the surface of a host plate. Numerical and experimental results show that a local resonance bandgap for an anti-symmetric Lamb wave, rather than a symmetric Lamb wave, can be obtained and tuned through the shunting inductance circuit. Within such mode bandgap, the wave control for propagating a specific mode of the Lamb wave can be further realized, i.e., the mode of the Lamb wave is purified. The design presented herein offers enhanced capabilities in controlling guided wave propagation for engineering applications and nondestructive testing techniques.
In this paper, a piezoelectric metasurface is proposed to manipulate the anti-symmetric mode Lamb wave by altering the diffraction order. The metasurface attached to a host plate is symmetrically arranged by out-of-plane polarized piezoelectric patches connected with synthetic inductance circuits. Without changing the physical configuration, the transmitted phase of the anti-symmetric mode Lamb wave can be shifted arbitrarily in 0 ∼ 2π range by the metasurface. Furthermore, the relationship between the phase gradient and diffraction order is investigated, and different orders of diffraction waves can be obtained by adjusting the shunting inductance circuits. The symmetric transmission and asymmetric transmission from a couple of axis symmetric incident waves can be realized by utilizing +1st-order and −1st-order diffraction. Moreover, omnidirectional wave reflection and wave trapping in channelized waveguides can also be realized by utilizing the 0th-order diffraction. The results indicate that the proposed piezoelectric metasurface has great potentials in manipulating guided waves with a large incident angle and isolating wave propagation.
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