Engineering Acoustics/Reflection and transmission of plane waves: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 23:13, 1 May 2018

Before discussing the reflection and transmission of plane waves, the relation between particle velocity and acoustic pressure is investigated.

ut=1ρopx

The acoustic pressure and particle velocity can be described in complex form.

𝐩=𝐏ej(ωtKx)

𝐮=𝐮𝐨ej(ωtKx)

Differentiating and substituting,

jω𝐮=jK𝐩ρo=jω𝐩ρoCo

𝐮=𝐩ρoCo

The specific acoustic impedance for plane waves is defined.

𝐙=𝐩𝐮=ρoCo

Consider an incident plane wave in a medium with specific impedance r1=ρ1C1 which encounters the boundary between medium 1 and medium 2. Part of the wave is reflected back into medium 1 and the remaining part is transmitted to medium 2 with specific impedance r2=ρ2C2. The pressure field in medium 1 is described by the sum of the incident and reflected components of the wave.

𝐩𝟏=𝐩𝐢+𝐩𝐫=𝐏𝐢ej(ωtK1x)+𝐏𝐫ej(ωt+K1x)

The pressure field in medium 2 is composed only of the transmitted component of the wave.

𝐩𝟐=𝐩𝐭=𝐏𝐭ej(ωtK2x)

Reflection and transmission of normally incident plane wave

Notice that the frequency of the wave remains constant across the boundary, however the specific acoustic impedance changes across the boundary. The propagation speed in each medium is different, so the wave number of each medium is also different. There are two boundary conditions to be satisfied.

  1. The acoustic pressure must be continuous at the boundary
  2. The particle velocity must be continuous at the boundary

Applying the first boundary condition,

𝐩𝟏(x=0)=𝐩𝟐(x=0)

𝐏𝐢+𝐏𝐫=𝐏𝐭

Applying the second boundary condition and using the definition of specific impedance,

𝐮𝟏(x=0)=𝐮𝟐(x=0)

𝐮𝐢(x=0)+𝐮𝐫(x=0)=𝐮𝐭(x=0)

𝐏𝐢r1𝐏𝐫r1=𝐏𝐭r2

The pressure reflection and transmission coefficients are defined as the ratio of the reflected and transmitted acoustic pressure over the incident pressure, respectively.

𝐑=𝐏𝐫𝐏𝐢

𝐓=𝐏𝐭𝐏𝐢

The specific acoustic impedance ratio is also defined.

ζ=r2r1

Applying the above definitions on the boundary conditions,

1+𝐑=𝐓

1𝐑=𝐓ζ

Solving for the pressure reflection coefficient,

𝐑=𝐓1=ζ1ζ+1=r2r1r2+r1

Solving for the pressure transmission coefficient,

𝐓=𝐑+1=2ζζ+1=2r2r2+r1

Solving for the specific acoustic impedance ratio,

ζ=1+𝐑1𝐑=𝐓2𝐓

Case 1: Consider an incident plane wave that encounters a rigid boundary. This is the case if the specific impedance of medium 2 is significantly larger than the specific impedance of medium 1. Thus, the specific acoustic impedance ratio is very large, the reflection coefficient approaches 1 and the transmission coefficient approaches 2.

𝐑=1=𝐏𝐫𝐏𝐢𝐏𝐫=𝐏𝐢𝐮(x=0)=0

𝐓=2=𝐏𝐭𝐏𝐢𝐏𝐭=2𝐏𝐢𝐩(x=0)=2𝐏𝐢

The amplitudes of the incident and reflected waves are equal. The reflected wave is in phase with the incident wave. The particle velocity at the boundary is zero. The acoustic pressure amplitude at the boundary is equal to twice the pressure amplitude of the incident wave and it is maximum.

Case 2: Consider an incident plane wave that encounters a resilient boundary. This is the case if the specific impedance of medium 2 is significantly smaller than the specific impedance of medium 1. Thus, the specific acoustic impedance ratio approaches zero, the reflection coefficient approaches -1 and the transmission coefficient approaches zero.

𝐑=1=𝐏𝐫𝐏𝐢𝐏𝐫=𝐏𝐢𝐮(x=0)=𝟐𝐏𝐢r1

𝐓=0=𝐏𝐭𝐏𝐢𝐏𝐭=0𝐩(x=0)=0

The amplitudes of the incident and reflected waves are equal. The reflected wave is 180 out of phase with the incident wave. The particle velocity at the boundary is a maximum. The acoustic pressure at the boundary is zero.

Case 3: Consider two media with the same specific acoustic impedance so that the specific acoustic impedance ratio is 1, the reflection coefficient is zero and the transmission coefficient is 1. Therefore, the wave is not reflected, only transmitted. It behaves as if there was no boundary.

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