| Literature DB >> 31527751 |
Francesco De Nicola1, Lorenzo Donato Tenuzzo2, Ilenia Viola3, Rujing Zhang4, Hongwei Zhu4, Augusto Marcelli5,6, Stefano Lupi7,2.
Abstract
The ability to generate, amplify, mix, and modulate sound with no harmonic distortion in a passive opto-acoustic device would revolutionize the field of acoustics. The photo-thermo-acoustic (PTA) effect allows to transduce light into sound without any bulk electro-mechanically moving parts and electrical connections, as for conventional loudspeakers. Also, PTA devices can be integrated with standard silicon complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) fabrication techniques. Here, we demonstrate that the ultimate PTA efficiency of graphene aerogels, depending on their particular thermal and optical properties, can be experimentally achieved by reducing their mass density. Furthermore, we illustrate that the aerogels behave as an omnidirectional pointsource throughout the audible range with no harmonic distortion. This research represents a breakthrough for audio-visual consumer technologies and it could pave the way to novel opto-acoustic sensing devices.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31527751 PMCID: PMC6746718 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-50082-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Photo-thermo-acoustic effect in graphene aerogels. (a) Scheme of the PTA microscopic mechanism in graphene. Light with photon energy modulated in intensity at a frequency f is absorbed by graphene. Excited electrons relax by ultrafast electron-phonon scattering processes, which heat the sample. The temperature oscillation leads to a pressure wave with the same frequency f, i.e. sound. (b) Conceptual scheme of the experiment. A panchromatic light is shone on the sample. The sound emitted by the aerogel is recorded by a microphone connected to a sound card. (c) Representative SEM micrograph of a graphene aerogel.
Figure 2Density-dependent PTA frequency response in graphene aerogels. (a) Unweighted SPL frequency response at the input power of 1 W and recorded at 1 m distance from the source for two graphene aerogels with effective mass density ρ = 0.25 kg/m3 (red solid curve) and (blue solid curve). The black solid curve represents the limiting analytical PTA model with no free parameters. (b) Unweighted SPL at 1 W/1 m/1 kHz as a function of the aerogel mass density (red dots). The black solid curve represents the PTA model. (c) Unweighted PTA efficiency for the aerogel with effective mass density (red solid curve). The black solid curve represents the PTA model. (d) Unweighted SPL frequency response at the input power of 1 W and recorded at 1 m distance from the source for a graphene aerogel with effective mass density ρ = 0.25 kg/m3 (red solid curve) and commercial earphones (blue solid curve).
Figure 3Harmonic analysis of PTA sound emission in graphene aerogels. Fast Fourier transform of the light input (a) and sound output (b) signals at 200 Hz, 1 kHz, and 10 kHz for the aerogel with effective mass density . The input and output signals are undistorted in the whole audible range.
Figure 4Photo-thermo-acoustic directivity in graphene aerogel loudspeakers. Experimental directivity of the sound emitted at 1 W/1 m and at 200 Hz (red dots), 1 kHz (green squares), and 10 kHz (blue diamonds) from the graphene aerogel with effective mass density ρ = 0.25 kg/m3 in the azimuthal (a) and polar (b) planes. Solid curves represents the PTA model. The directivity indexes[24] are DI(200 Hz) = 11 dB, DI(1 kHz) = 13 dB, and DI(10 kHz) = 18 dB.