Elastic wave cloaking via symmetrized transformation media
Sophia R. Sklan, Ronald Y.S. Pak, and Baowen Li

TL;DR
This paper introduces a symmetrized elastic wave cloak that restores physical material symmetry, enabling seismic shielding with practical performance, despite some loss compared to ideal cloaks.
Contribution
It develops a symmetrized elastic cloak that maintains material symmetry, overcoming previous limitations of elastic cloaking and demonstrating seismic wave shielding effectiveness.
Findings
Reduces tunnel displacement by an order of magnitude.
Decreases energy transmission by two orders of magnitude.
Effective above a critical frequency related to surface wave generation.
Abstract
Transformation media theory, which steers waves in solids via an effective geometry induced by a refractive material (Fermat's principle of least action), provides a means of controlling vibrations and elastic waves beyond the traditional dissipative structures regime. In particular, it could be used to create an elastic wave cloak, shielding an interior region against elastic waves while simultaneously preventing scattering in the outside domain. However, as a true elastic wave cloak would generally require nonphysical materials with stiffness tensors lacking the minor symmetry (implying asymmetric stress), the utility of such an elastic wave cloak has thus far been limited. Here we develop a means of overcoming this limitation via the development of a symmetrized elastic cloak, sacrificing some of the performance of the perfect cloak for the sake of restoring the minor symmetry. We…
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