Broadband nonreciprocal acoustic propagation using programmable boundary conditions: from analytical modelling to experimental implementation
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 19:07 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Direction-dependent programmable boundary conditions in a 1D waveguide produce broadband acoustic isolation.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We theoretically, numerically and experimentally demonstrate the acoustic isolator effect in a 1D waveguide with direction dependent controlled boundary conditions. A theoretical model explains the principle of non reciprocal propagation. Numerical simulations on a reduced model show the non-reciprocity as well as the passivity through the scattering matrix and power balance. An experimental implementation validates the approach.
What carries the argument
Direction-dependent controlled boundary conditions applied to a 1D acoustic waveguide.
Load-bearing premise
Programmable boundary conditions can be implemented in an experiment without introducing unmodeled losses or instabilities that would prevent broadband isolation.
What would settle it
Observation of equal transmission coefficients in both directions or violation of energy conservation in the experimental measurements would disprove the claimed nonreciprocity and passivity.
Figures
read the original abstract
In this paper, we theoretically, numerically and experimentally demonstrate the acoustic isolator effect in a 1D waveguide with direction dependent controlled boundary conditions. A theoretical model is used to explain the principle of non reciprocal propagation in boundary controlled waveguides. Numerical simulations are carried out on a reduced model to show the non-reciprocity as well as the passivity of the system, through the computation of the scattering matrix and the power delivered by the system. Finally, an experimental implementation validate the potential of programmable boundary conditions for non reciprocal propagation.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper claims to theoretically model, numerically simulate (via scattering matrix and power-balance calculations on a reduced model), and experimentally implement nonreciprocal acoustic propagation in a 1D waveguide by imposing direction-dependent programmable boundary conditions, thereby realizing a passive acoustic isolator.
Significance. If the experimental demonstration confirms that the programmable boundaries achieve broadband isolation while remaining passive (no net acoustic power supplied by the control hardware), the result would provide a concrete route to nonreciprocal acoustic devices without relying on nonlinear media or external bias fields.
major comments (1)
- [Experimental implementation] Experimental implementation section: the abstract states that the experiment validates the isolator effect, yet no data or analysis is presented showing that the actuators/sensors deliver zero net acoustic power (or that any supplied power is accounted for in the power-balance calculation). The numerical passivity result on the reduced model does not automatically transfer to the physical controller; without this measurement the observed nonreciprocity could be active rather than the passive effect claimed.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed review and the emphasis placed on confirming passivity in the experimental implementation. We address the single major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Experimental implementation] Experimental implementation section: the abstract states that the experiment validates the isolator effect, yet no data or analysis is presented showing that the actuators/sensors deliver zero net acoustic power (or that any supplied power is accounted for in the power-balance calculation). The numerical passivity result on the reduced model does not automatically transfer to the physical controller; without this measurement the observed nonreciprocity could be active rather than the passive effect claimed.
Authors: We agree that the manuscript reports power-balance calculations demonstrating passivity only on the numerical reduced model and does not present corresponding experimental measurements of net acoustic power delivered by the actuators or sensors. The experimental results validate the nonreciprocal propagation but do not directly confirm that the physical controller supplies zero net power. In the revised manuscript we will add experimental power measurements (or an explicit accounting of supplied power) to demonstrate that the observed isolation remains passive. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: derivation chain is independent and self-contained
full rationale
The paper derives a theoretical model for direction-dependent boundary conditions in a 1D waveguide, computes the scattering matrix and power balance on a reduced numerical model to demonstrate non-reciprocity and passivity, then reports separate experimental validation. No load-bearing step reduces by construction to fitted inputs, self-citations, or ansatzes imported from prior author work; the central claims rest on explicit computation and physical implementation rather than renaming or self-definition. This is the normal non-circular outcome for a modeling-plus-experiment paper.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Direction-dependent controlled boundary conditions can produce nonreciprocal propagation in a 1D waveguide
Reference graph
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