Lego-Like Wall Creates Holograms Of Sound

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Lego-Like Wall Creates Holograms Of Sound by Ken Kingery-Duke

Engineers have developed a simple, energy-efficient way to create 3D acoustic holograms that they say could revolutionize home stereo systems, medical ultrasound devices, and more.

Most everyone is familiar with the concept of visual holograms, which manipulate light to make it appear as though a 3D object is sitting in empty space. These optical tricks work by shaping the electromagnetic field so that it mimics light bouncing off an actual object.

Sound also travels in waves. But rather than electromagnetic energy traveling through space, sound propagates as pressure waves that momentarily compress the molecules they are traveling through. And just like visible light, these waves can be manipulated into 3D patterns.

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“We show the exact same control over a sound wave as people have previously achieved with light waves,” says Steve Cummer, professor of electrical and computer engineering at Duke University. “It’s like an acoustic virtual reality display. It gives you a more realistic sense of the spatial pattern of the sound field.”

In a paper published in Nature Scientific Reports, researchers show that they can create any 3D pattern they want with sound waves. The achievement is made possible by metamaterials—synthetic materials composed of many individual, engineered cells that together produce unnatural properties.

Lego-Like Wall, Sound Holograms
A computer rendering of a sound wave that traveled through an array of acoustic metamaterial and was shaped into a pattern like the letter A one foot past the array. This pattern could not be seen, only heard. (Credit: Duke)
Sound Holograms

In this case, the metamaterials resemble a wall of Legos. Each individual block is made of plastic by a 3D printer and contains a spiral within. The tightness of the spiral affects the way sound travels through it—the tighter the coil, the slower sound waves travel through it.

While the individual blocks can’t influence the sound wave’s direction, the entire device effectively can. For example, if one side of the sound wave is slowed down but not the other, the resulting wave fronts will be redirected so that the sound is bent toward the slow side.

‘Loud spots’

“Anybody can tell the difference between a single stereo speaker and a live string quartet playing music behind them,” says Yangbo “Abel” Xie, a doctoral student in Cummer’s laboratory. “Part of the reason why is that the sound waves carry spatial information as well as notes and volume.”

By calculating how 12 different types of acoustic metamaterial building blocks will affect the sound wave, researchers can arrange them in a wall to form any wave pattern on the other side that they want. With enough care, the sound waves can produce a specific hologram at a specific distance away.

“It’s basically like putting a mask in front of a speaker,” Cummer says. “It makes it seem like the sound is coming from a more complicated source than it is.”

Cummer and Xie, in collaboration with Yun Jing, assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at North Carolina State, and Tarry Shen, a doctoral student in Jing’s lab, proved their sound mask works in two different ways. In the first test, they assembled a metamaterial wall that manipulated an incoming sound wave into a shape like the letter “A” about a foot away. In a second demonstration, they showed that the technique can focus sound waves into several “hot spots”—or loud spots—of sound, also a foot from the device.

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There are existing technologies that can also produce this effect. Modern ultrasound imaging devices, for example, use phased arrays with many individual transducers that can each produce precisely controlled sound waves. But this approach has its drawbacks.

“If you’ve ever had an ultrasound done, you know there’s a small wand attached to a much bigger machine a few feet away,” Cummer says. “Not only can this setup be cumbersome, it consumes an enormous amount of power. Our approach can help produce the same effect in a cheaper, smaller system.”

For the metamaterial device to work in such applications, however, each cell must be smaller than the waves it is manipulating. And for ultrasound technologies that operate in the megahertz range, this means the individual cells would have to be 100 times smaller than in the current demonstration blocks.

Cummer and Xie are looking for industry partners to show that this sort of fabrication would be possible. They are also shopping the idea around to industries that work in the kilohertz range, such as aerial sensing and imaging technologies. And they’re speaking with sound companies to make a single speaker sound more like a live orchestra.

“We’re currently in the exploration phase, trying to determine where this technology would be useful,” Xie says. “Any scenario where your goal is to control sound, this idea could be deployed. And it could be deployed to make something totally new, or to make something that already exists better, simpler or cheaper.”

The work was supported in part by the Office of Naval Research.

Source: Duke University

Original Study DOI: 10.1038/srep35437

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