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This paper presents a numerical model for the acoustic coupled fluid-structure interaction (FSI) of a submerged finite elastic body using the fast multipole boundary element method (FMBEM). The Helmholtz and elastodynamic boundary integral equations (BIEs) are, respectively, employed to model the exterior fluid and interior solid domains, and the pressure and displacement unknowns are coupled between conforming meshes at the shared boundary interface to achieve the acoustic FSI. The low frequency FMBEM is applied to both BIEs to reduce the algorithmic complexity of the iterative solution from O(N(2)) to O(N(1.5)) operations per matrix-vector product for N boundary unknowns. Numerical examples are presented to demonstrate the algorithmic and memory complexity of the method, which are shown to be in good agreement with the theoretical estimates, while the solution accuracy is comparable to that achieved by a conventional finite element-boundary element FSI model.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.4916603 | DOI Listing |
ACS Chem Neurosci
September 2025
Department of Bioengineering, Rice University, Houston, Texas 77030, United States.
Many neurological and psychiatric diseases are characterized by pathological neuronal activity. Current treatments involve drugs, surgeries, and implantable devices to modulate or remove the affected region. However, none of these methods can be simultaneously nonsurgical and possess site- and cell type specificity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Soc Mass Spectrom
September 2025
Anhui Province Key Laboratory for Control and Applications of Optoelectronic Information Materials, School of Physics and Electronic Information, Anhui Normal University, Wuhu, Anhui 241000, China.
An integrated miniature time-of-flight mass spectrometer (TOF-MS) system coupled with a pocket-size 3D-printed laser-induced acoustic desorption (LIAD) source is described. This 3D-printed LIAD source utilizes only a miniature deceleration motor to achieve two-dimensional motion of the target surface, simplifying the source structure and improving the long-term stability of mass spectrometry measurements. It has been successfully applied to analyze the model molecule creatinine and ingredients in an energy beverage (Red Bull), where main natural nutrients were clearly identified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Chem Chem Phys
September 2025
Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Technology Jodhpur, N.H. 62, Nagaur Road, Karwar, Jodhpur, Rajasthan, 342030, India.
We report an anomalous temperature-induced transition in thermal conductivity in the germanene monolayer around a critical temperature = 350 K. Equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations reveal a transition from ∼ scaling below the to ∼ above, contrasting with conventional ∼ behavior. This anomalous scaling correlates with the long-scale characteristic timescale obtained from double exponential fitting of the heat current autocorrelation function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroscience
September 2025
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Southern University of Science and Technology, Shenzhen, Guangdong 518055, China. Electronic address:
The auditory brainstem response (ABR) remains the gold standard for evaluating hearing function in both animal models and humans. Features of ABR, including threshold, wave I amplitude and latency are critical for diagnosing and investigating the mechanisms of hearing loss. Critically, the rapid proliferation of genetically engineered mouse models in hearing research has created an imperative demand for high-throughput ABR testing capabilities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
September 2025
School of Ocean Engineering and Technology, Sun Yat-sen University, Zhuhai 519000, China.
This study establishes a quantitative framework using field observations and normal mode theory to reveal wind field control mechanisms over ambient noise vertical directionality in shallow water. Acoustic data from a vertical line array in the northern South China Sea, combined with sound speed profiles, seabed properties, and multi-source wind fields (ERA5 reanalysis/Weibull-distributed synthetics), demonstrate: (1) A 20-km spatial noise-energy threshold (>90% energy contribution), challenging conventional near-field assumptions (1-2 km); (2) frequency-dependent distribution: low-frequency (50-200 Hz) directionality depends on near-field sources, while high-frequency (>400 Hz) energy shifts seaward due to modal cutoff variations; (3) model validation shows 0.96 correlation at 100 Hz/100 km (stratified medium accuracy), but seabed interface waves induce 3.
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