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Avionics Component Shock Sensitivity & FEA Shock Analysis By Tom Irvine

Avionics Component Shock Sensitivity & FEA Shock Analysis By Tom Irvine Tutorial & Training Oriented Materials. https://vibrationdata.wordpress.com/. Stage Separation Test. Metal Clad Linear Shaped Charge. Linear Shaped Charge

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Avionics Component Shock Sensitivity & FEA Shock Analysis By Tom Irvine

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  1. Avionics Component Shock Sensitivity & FEA Shock Analysis By Tom Irvine Tutorial & Training Oriented Materials

  2. https://vibrationdata.wordpress.com/

  3. Stage Separation Test Metal Clad Linear Shaped Charge • Linear Shaped Charge • But fire and smoke would not occur in near-vacuum of space • Plasma jet would occur instead

  4. Vibrationdata Electronic Boxes • Electronic components in vehicles are subjected to shock and vibration environments • The components must be designed and tested accordingly

  5. Avionics Component Qualification Testing, Pyrotechnic Excitation • Resonant single or double plate excited by mild detonating cord • Plate made from steel or aluminium • Must over-test in out-of-plane axis in order to meet specification in lateral axis • Used for near-field shock specifications or far-field with very conservative margin

  6. Vibrationdata Reference Steinberg’s text

  7. Vibrationdata Circuit Boards & Piece Parts

  8. Vibrationdata Solder Joints • Aerospace and military components must be designed and tested to withstand shock and vibration environments Cracked solder Joints for Piece Part with “J leads”

  9. Solder Joint & Lead Wire Failures Staking needed for parts weighing more than 5 grams • Adhesive failure and rupture of solder joint after a stringent shock test • Large deflection of PCB resulting from an insufficient support/reinforcement of the PCB combined with high shock loads (above 2000g SRS, depending on the induced PCB deflection), can lead to adhesive failure and rupture of solder joint

  10. Solder Joint & Lead Wire Failures (cont) • Lacing cords alone are insufficient • Need lacing plus staking • Sheared lead between solder joint and winding of coil

  11. Potential Shock Failure Modes • Crystal oscillators can shatter • Large components such as DC-DC converters can detached from circuit boards

  12. Shock Failure Theories & Proponents • Acceleration – European Space Agency • Pseudo Velocity / Stress – Gaberson • Relative Displacement - Steinberg Howard A. Gaberson (1931-2013) Dave S. Steinberg

  13. Acceleration: Relay Shock Test • Pendulum hammer impact excitation • Relays were powered and monitored Accelerometer Relay Fixture

  14. Acceleration: Relay Sensitivity from Shock Testing EL Series Relay • Note that the levels in the table are maximum values of the time history of the acceleration • The SRS converges to the peak time history acceleration as the natural frequency increases to some high value GP250 Relay

  15. Acceleration: Part Sensitivity Summary

  16. Pseudo Velocity: MIL-STD-810E, Shock Velocity Criterion • An empirical rule-of-thumb in MIL-STD-810E states that a shock response spectrum is considered severe only if one of its components exceeds the level • Threshold = [ 0.8 (G/Hz) * Natural Frequency (Hz) ] • For example, the severity threshold at 100 Hz would be 80 G • This rule is effectively a velocity criterion • MIL-STD-810E states that it is based on unpublished observations that military-quality equipment does not tend to exhibit shock failures below a shock response spectrum velocity of 100 inches/sec (254 cm/sec) • Equation actually corresponds to 50 inches/sec. It thus has a built-in 6 dB margin of conservatism •  Note that this rule was not included in MIL-STD-810F or G, however

  17. Pseudo Velocity: Historical Notes • The 100 ips limit appears to have been derived from two sources • The first was Gaberson’s shock test of six squirrel cage fans or blowers • The second was a analytical calculation based on the yield stress limit of mild steel

  18. Pseudo Velocity: Historical Notes (cont) • The maximum velocity vmaxfor a given beam undergoing bending vibration is calculated as • Mild steel beam: σyield= 33 ksi → vmax = 130 in/sec

  19. Pseudo Velocity: Morse Chart R. Morse, Spacecraft & Launch Vehicle Dynamics Environments Workshop Program, Aerospace Corp., El Segundo, CA, June 2000

  20. Relative Displacement: Circuit Board and Component Lead Diagram L Relative Motion h Component Z B Relative Motion Component

  21. Relative Displacement: Empirical Fatigue Formula • Let Z be the single-amplitude displacement at the center of the board that will give a fatigue life of about 20 million stress reversals in a random-vibration environment, based upon the 3 circuit board relative displacement • Steinberg’s empirical formula for Z 3 limitis • Steinberg’s empirical formula for the shock limit is • Z shock = 6 * Z 3σ limit inches

  22. Relative Displacement: Position Factor r . 0.707 1.0 0.5 0.707

  23. Component Constants

  24. Component Constants (cont) Surface-mounted leadless ceramic chip carrier (LCCC). A hermetically sealed ceramic package. Instead of metal prongs, LCCCs have metallic semicircles (called castellations) on their edges that solder to the pads.

  25. Component Constants (cont) Surface-mounted ball grid array (BGA). BGA is a surface mount chip carrier that connects to a printed circuit board through a bottom side array of solder balls.

  26. Steinberg Circuit Board Damping Equation • Equation for approximating Q for a system is

  27. Steinberg Circuit Board Damping, Sample Cases

  28. Tom’s Measured Data from Shaker Tests Range is 9 to 29

  29. Shock Analysis, Base Excitation • First choice is to model component as an SDOF system • Use FEA for MDOF systems

  30. FEA Shock Analysis Introduction • MDOF Shock analysis can be performed either as: • 1. Time domain modal transient • 2. Response spectrum modal combination • Both methods are demonstrated in this presentation • The time domain method requires more computation time but is potentially more realistic • It gives insight into understanding the plausible timing of peaks for individual modes • Allows modal Q values to be different than SRS specification Q value • There are two methods for applying the acceleration as shown on the next page • The indirect seismic mass method is the subject for this presentation

  31. Acceleration Excitation Methods Assume a rectangular plate mounted via posts at each corner F Rigid links • Directly enforce acceleration at corners • For uniform base excitation: • Mount plate to heavy seismic mass via rigid links • Apply force to yield desired acceleration at plate corners 31

  32. Time History Synthesis to Meet an SRS Specification • Typical specification is defined from 100 to 10,000 Hz • Extrapolate down to 10 Hz to cover low frequency modes and for realism • Synthesized acceleration time history and corresponding velocity and displacement should each have zero values for numerical stability

  33. Damped Sinusoids • Synthesize a series of damped sinusoids to satisfy the SRS • Trial-and-error process with random number generation and convergence • Individual damped-sinusoid • Series of damped-sinusoids • Reconstruct damped sine series via wavelets (non-orthogonal, shaker shock variety)

  34. Wavelet Equation Wm(t) = acceleration at time t for wavelet m Am = acceleration amplitude f m = frequency t dm = delay Nm = number of half-sines, odd integer > 3

  35. Typical Shaker-Shock Wavelet • A shock waveform can be modeled by a series of wavelets: • Ferebee R , Irvine T, Clayton J, Alldredge D, An Alternative Method Of Specifying Shock Test Criteria: NASA/TM-2008-215253 • Trial-and-error process using random number generation with convergence

  36. Time History Synthesis Matlab Script Script included in the Vibrationdata GUI package freely available at: https://vibrationdata.wordpress.com

  37. Synthesized Time History • The sample rate is 100K samples/sec which is 10 x the highest SRS natural frequency • The time histories is composed of a series of damped sinusoids which have been reconstructed in terms of wavelets

  38. Matlab: Time History Set • Maintaining stable velocity & displacement are good engineering practice • Otherwise relative displacement error may occur due to significant digit effects if the displacement has a “ski slope” effect

  39. The synthesized time history satisfies the SRS specification within tolerance bands

  40. Femap: Plate Nodes, Elements & Corner Constraints • Aluminum 6061-T651 • Flat square plate 12 x 12 x 0.25 inch • Constrain all corner nodes for no TX, TY or TZ translation • Node 1201 is at the center in this model • 48 elements & 49 nodes per edge • Q=10 for all modes

  41. Femap: Mode Shape 1 • The fundamental mode at 117.6 Hz has 93.3% of the total modal mass in the T3 axis • The plate appears to behave almost as a single-degree-of-freedom system • But higher modes make a very significant contribution to the overall shock response

  42. Femap: Mode Shape 6 • The sixth mode at 723 Hz has 3.6% of the total modal mass in the T3 axis

  43. Femap: Mode Shape 12 • The twelfth mode at 1502 Hz has 1.6% of the total modal mass in the T3 axis

  44. Femap: Mode Shape 19 • The 19th mode at 2266 Hz has only 0.3% of the total modal mass in the T3 axis

  45. Matlab: Parameters for T3 • The Participation Factors & Eigenvectors are shown as absolute values • The Eigenvectors are mass-normalized • The Eigenvectors are the only parameter in the table which depends on location • Modes 1, 6, 12 & 19 account for 98.9% of the total mass

  46. Femap: Synthesized Acceleration Time History • The X-axis is Time (sec) • The Y-axis is Acceleration (in/sec^2)

  47. Femap: Q Damping • Customize the damping table according to your analysis problem need • Damping can vary with frequency • Q=10 is equivalent to 5% viscous modal damping

  48. Femap: Node Group Node 1 Node 49 Node 2402 Node 1201 Node 2403

  49. Femap: Element Group • Run the Nastran modal transient analysis • Post-process the *.f06 file Element 50 Node 1201 Element 1129

  50. Matlab: Vibrationdata GUI, Modal Transient Extraction • Input File: square_plate_modal_transient_seismic_mass.f06 • Node 2402 is base drive node

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