The gravity-induced depth-dependent elastic properties of a granular half-space result in multiple dispersive surface modes and demand the consideration of material heterogeneity in metabarrier designs to suppress surface waves. Numerous locally resonant metabarrier configurations have been proposed in the literature to suppress Rayleigh surface waves in homogeneous media, with little focus on extending the designs to a heterogeneous half-space. In this work, a metabarrier comprising partially embedded rod-like resonators to suppress the fundamental dispersive surface wave modes in heterogeneous granular media known as first order PSV (PSV1; where P is the longitudinal mode and SV is the shear-vertical mode) and second order PSV (PSV2) is proposed. The unit-cell dispersion analysis, together with an extensive frequency-domain finite element analysis, reveals preferential hybridization of the PSV1 and PSV2 modes with the longitudinal and flexural resonances of the resonators, respectively. The presence of the cutoff frequency for the longitudinal-resonance hybridized mode facilitates straightforward suppression of the PSV1 mode, while PSV2 mode suppression is possible by tailoring the hybridized flexural resonance modes. These PSV1 and PSV2 bandgaps are realized experimentally in a granular testbed comprising glass beads by embedding 3D-printed resonator rods. Also explored are novel graded metabarriers capable of suppressing both PSV1 and PSV2 modes over a broad frequency range for potential applications in vibration control and seismic isolation. 
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                    This content will become publicly available on June 1, 2026
                            
                            Solid-solid phononic crystal with strongly time-modulated elastic constituents
                        
                    
    
            A spatially periodic structure of heterogeneous elastic rods that periodically oscillate along their axes is proposed as a time-modulated phononic crystal. Each rod is a bi-material cylinder, consisting of periodically distributed slices with significantly different elastic properties. The rods are imbedded in an elastic matrix. Using a plane wave expansion, it is shown that the dispersion equation for sound waves is obtained from the solutions of a quadratic eigenvalue problem over the eigenfrequency ω. The coefficients of the corresponding quadratic polynomial are represented by infinite matrices defined in the space spanned by the reciprocal lattice vectors, where elements depend on the velocity of translation motion of the rods and Bloch vector k. The calculated band structure exhibits both ω and k bandgaps. If a frequency gap overlaps with a momentum gap, a mixed gap is formed. Within a mixed gap, ω and k acquire imaginary parts. A method of analysis of the dispersion equation in complex ω−k space is proposed. As a result of the high elastic contrast between the materials in the bi-material rods, a substantial depth of modulation is achieved, leading to a large gap to midgap ratio for the frequency, momentum, and mixed bandgaps. 
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                            - Award ID(s):
- 1741677
- PAR ID:
- 10629122
- Publisher / Repository:
- Acoustical Society of America
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
- Volume:
- 157
- Issue:
- 6
- ISSN:
- 1520-8524
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 4252 to 4261
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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