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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 125(21): 214301, 2020 Nov 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33275023

ABSTRACT

Twisted bilayer graphene develops quasiflat bands at specific "magic" interlayer rotation angles through an unconventional mechanism connected to carrier chirality. Quasiflat bands are responsible for a wealth of exotic, correlated-electron phases in the system. In this Letter, we propose a mechanical analog of twisted bilayer graphene made of two vibrating plates patterned with a honeycomb mesh of masses and coupled across a continuum elastic medium. We show that flexural waves in the device exhibit vanishing group velocity and quasiflat bands at magic angles in close correspondence with electrons in graphene models. The strong similarities of spectral structure and spatial eigenmodes in the two systems demonstrate the chiral nature of the mechanical flat bands. We derive analytical expressions that quantitatively connect the mechanical and electronic models, which allow us to predict the parameters required for an experimental realization of our proposal.

2.
Research (Wash D C) ; 2019: 8345683, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31549089

ABSTRACT

Invisibility or unhearability cloaks have been made possible by using metamaterials enabling light or sound to flow around obstacle without the trace of reflections or shadows. Metamaterials are known for being flexible building units that can mimic a host of unusual and extreme material responses, which are essential when engineering artificial material properties to realize a coordinate transforming cloak. Bending and stretching the coordinate grid in space require stringent material parameters; therefore, small inaccuracies and inevitable material losses become sources for unwanted scattering that are decremental to the desired effect. These obstacles further limit the possibility of achieving a robust concealment of sizeable objects from either radar or sonar detection. By using an elaborate arrangement of gain and lossy acoustic media respecting parity-time symmetry, we built a one-way unhearability cloak able to hide objects seven times larger than the acoustic wavelength. Generally speaking, our approach has no limits in terms of working frequency, shape, or size, specifically though we demonstrate how, in principle, an object of the size of a human can be hidden from audible sound.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 122(19): 195501, 2019 May 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31144964

ABSTRACT

Topological phases of matter that have been recently extended to topological phases of sound can confine acoustic energy at the corners of higher-order topological insulators. We broaden this concept by incorporating parity-time symmetry and show new topologically protected confinement rules that are dictated by the geometrical arrangement of gain and loss units. Particularly, our findings reveal how sound trapping occurs at all corners when parity-time symmetry is intact, beyond the exceptional point within the broken phase; however, opposite corners sustain either sink- or sourcelike states that could lead to novel non-Hermitian guides for sound.

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