Applied Physics Letters | 2021

Experimental demonstration of a reconfigurable acoustic second-order topological insulator using condensed soda cans array

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Traditional topological insulators support the topologically protected boundary states that are one dimension lower than the system itself. Recently, higher-order topological insulators have received increasing attention in the field of acoustic wave manipulation due to their unique bulk-boundary correspondence principle, hosting both gapped edge states and in-gap corner states simultaneously. However, for most of the topological acoustic systems, the lack of reconfigurability and the inevitable outer trivial regions with considerable thickness restrict the potential applications of acoustic topological insulators. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a reconfigurable condensed acoustic second-order topological insulator in free space by using subwavelength soda cans whose side length is significantly reduced to 1.89 times of the corresponding wavelength. The topological nontrivial phase is introduced through tunably modulating the interval between cans. Without the typically required outer trivial regions, we observe the topological corner states at the corner of the finite structures in both simulations and experiments. Furthermore, the robustness against the defects induced by dislocations and deformations is discussed. We foresee that the proposal may facilitate the application potentials of topological acoustics in low-frequency sound manipulations.

Volume 118
Pages 203501
DOI 10.1063/5.0049030
Language English
Journal Applied Physics Letters

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