7.3 Transmission through a thin layer

A wave in medium 1 encounters a slab of medium 2 of thickness LL, beyond which it re-enters medium 1 (or some other medium 3). Reflections happen at both interfaces, and within the slab the waves bounce back and forth. The interference between all of these reflections can give a transmission coefficient that depends sensitively on LL, ω\omega, and the impedance ratios. This is the basis of acoustic impedance matching.

The setup

Three regions:

Incident wave from the left, no incoming wave from the right.

The result

Solving the boundary conditions at x=0x = 0 and x=Lx = L yields, for the special case Z1=Z3Z_1 = Z_3 (slab in homogeneous medium),

TP  =  11+14 ⁣(Z2/Z1Z1/Z2)2sin2(k2L).T_P \;=\; \frac{1}{1 + \tfrac14\!\left(Z_2/Z_1 - Z_1/Z_2\right)^2\, \sin^2(k_2 L)}.

The power transmission coefficient is periodic in k2Lk_2 L with period π\pi. Two extremes:

Quarter-wave matching

The most useful special case: the slab is a quarter-wavelength thick (k2L=π/2k_2 L = \pi/2) and has impedance Z2=Z1Z3Z_2 = \sqrt{Z_1 Z_3} (the geometric mean of the impedances on each side). Then it turns out — straightforward algebra from the general formulas — that

TP  =  1.T_P \;=\; 1.

A quarter-wave layer with the right impedance produces perfect transmission between two otherwise mismatched media. The mechanism: the wave reflected from the back interface returns to the front interface a full half-wavelength out of phase with the wave reflected from the front, exactly cancelling. All the energy ends up transmitted.

This is quarter-wave impedance matching. It is used in:

Bandwidth

A quarter-wave matcher works only at the design frequency. Move away from it, the slab thickness is no longer λ/4\lambda/4, and the cancellation degrades. The bandwidth depends on the impedance ratio: high contrast (like air-to-water) is harder to match over a wide band than low contrast. For broadband matching, you stack multiple quarter-wave layers in sequence, each with a different impedance — a transformer. The same trick is used in microwave engineering and antireflection coatings.

Anti-reflection by absence (not always)

The other extreme of the transmission formula — slab thickness equal to a half-wavelength — also gives perfect transmission, but for a different reason: the reflections from the two faces interfere destructively when the slab is transparent, regardless of Z2Z_2. A half-wave slab of any impedance is invisible at the design frequency. Useful for impedance “spacers” that need to be present but acoustically transparent.

What this gives us

The thin-layer transmission formula is the most general statement of interference-based filtering. By choosing layer thicknesses and impedances we can build acoustic filters that pass certain frequencies and block others — the acoustic analogue of optical interference filters. This is also the framework underlying acoustic metamaterials, where periodic structures of mismatched layers create bandgaps and unusual dispersion.

Next: the Huygens construction unifies reflection, refraction, and diffraction as three faces of one primitive.