Abstract

Semi-infinite elastic metamaterials and metasurfaces on homogeneous elastic half-spaces have attracted significant attention in the past two decades as efficient artificial structures to control and mitigate surface waves. In this research, the first two attenuation zones of an elastic metasurface composed of different arrangements of pillars on a substrate are investigated. First, the lowest frequency attenuation zone (LFAZ) is numerically investigated. Then, the rainbow trapping effect of the second attenuation zone (SAZ) is demonstrated by numerical simulations and experiments. The different characteristics of these two attenuation zones are brought together to connect the lower bound of the SAZ and the upper bound of the LFAZ, allowing to design a seismic metasurface that only uses one kind of artificial structure on a half-space to attenuate Rayleigh waves in the frequency range extending from 5 to 22 Hz.

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