Scattering of elastic waves by a sphere with cubic anisotropy with application to attenuation in polycrystalline materials
Journal article, 2023

Scattering of elastic waves by an anisotropic sphere with cubic symmetry inside an isotropic medium is studied. The waves in the isotropic surrounding are expanded in the spherical vector wave functions. Inside the sphere, the elastodynamic equations are first transformed to spherical coordinates and the displacement field is expanded in terms of the vector spherical harmonics in the angular directions and a power series in the radial direction. The governing equations inside the sphere give recursion relations among the expansion coefficients in the power series. The boundary conditions on the sphere then determine the expansion coefficients of the scattered wave. This determines the transition (T) matrix elements which are calculated explicitly to the leading order for low frequencies. Using the theory of Foldy, the T matrix elements of a single sphere are used to study attenuation and phase velocity of polycrystalline materials with cubic symmetry, explicitly for low frequencies and numerically for intermediate frequencies. Numerical comparisons of the present method with previously published results and recent finite element method (FEM) results show a good correspondence for low and intermediate frequencies. The present approach shows a better agreement with FEM for strongly anisotropic materials in comparison with other published methods.

elastic wave scattering

polycrystal

effective wavenumber

cubic anisotropy

sphere

Author

Ata Jafarzadeh

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Dynamics

Peter Folkow

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Dynamics

Anders E Boström

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Dynamics

Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences

1364-5021 (ISSN) 1471-2946 (eISSN)

Vol. 479 2272 20220476

Subject Categories

Applied Mechanics

Computational Mathematics

Fluid Mechanics and Acoustics

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1098/rspa.2022.0476

More information

Latest update

5/25/2023