High-frequency homogenization for periodic media
Author(s) -
R. V. Craster,
Julius Kaplunov,
A. V. Pichugin
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society a mathematical physical and engineering sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1471-2946
pISSN - 1364-5021
DOI - 10.1098/rspa.2009.0612
Subject(s) - homogenization (climate) , microscale chemistry , bloch wave , asymptotic homogenization , brillouin zone , wavelength , mathematical analysis , physics , wave propagation , homogeneous , classical mechanics , mathematics , mechanics , optics , statistical physics , condensed matter physics , finite element method , biodiversity , ecology , biology , thermodynamics , mathematics education
An asymptotic procedure based upon a two-scale approach is developed for wave propagation in a doubly periodic inhomogeneous medium with a characteristic length scale of microstructure far less than that of the macrostructure. In periodic media, there are frequencies for which standing waves, periodic with the period or double period of the cell, on the microscale emerge. These frequencies do not belong to the low-frequency range of validity covered by the classical homogenization theory, which motivates our use of the term ‘high-frequency homogenization’ when perturbing about these standing waves. The resulting long-wave equations are deduced only explicitly dependent upon the macroscale, with the microscale represented by integral quantities. These equations accurately reproduce the behaviour of the Bloch mode spectrum near the edges of the Brillouin zone, hence yielding an explicit way for homogenizing periodic media in the vicinity of ‘cell resonances’. The similarity of such model equations to high-frequency long wavelength asymptotics, for homogeneous acoustic and elastic waveguides, valid in the vicinities of thickness resonances is emphasized. Several illustrative examples are considered and show the efficacy of the developed techniques.
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