Optimizing multi-user sound communications in reverberating environments with acoustic reconfigurable metasurfaces
How do you ensure that, in a reverberant room, several people can speak simultaneously to several other people, making themselves perfectly understood and without any crosstalk between messages? In this work, we report a conceptual solution to this problem by developing an intelligent acoustic wall, which can be reconfigured electronically and is controlled by a learning algorithm that adapts to the geometry of the room and the positions of sources and receivers. To this end, a portion of the room boundaries is covered with a smart mirror made of a broadband acoustic reconfigurable metasurface (ARMs) designed to provide a two-state (0 or π) phase shift in the reflected waves by 200 independently tunable units. The whole phase pattern is optimized to maximize the Shannon capacity while minimizing crosstalk between the different sources and receivers. We demonstrate the control of multi-spectral sound fields covering a spectrum much larger than the coherence bandwidth of the room for diverse striking functionalities, including crosstalk-free acoustic communication, frequency-multiplexed communications, and multi-user communications. An experiment conducted with two music sources for two different people demonstrates a crosstalk-free simultaneous music playback. Our work opens new routes for the control of sound waves in complex media and for a new generation of acoustic devices.
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