1 / 31

LOCATION AND IDENTIFICATION OF DAMPING PARAMETERS

LOCATION AND IDENTIFICATION OF DAMPING PARAMETERS. Contents. Objectives of the research Introduction on damping identification techniques New energy-based method Numerical simulation Experimental results Conclusions Future works. Objectives of the research.

tyme
Download Presentation

LOCATION AND IDENTIFICATION OF DAMPING PARAMETERS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LOCATION AND IDENTIFICATION OF DAMPING PARAMETERS

  2. Contents • Objectives of the research • Introduction on damping identification techniques • New energy-based method • Numerical simulation • Experimental results • Conclusions • Future works

  3. Objectives of the research • - Better understanding of damping in structures from an engineering point of view • Defining a practical identification method • Validate the method with numerical simulations • Test the method on real structures

  4. Damping in structures • Damping in structures can be caused by several factors: • Material damping • Damping in joints • Dissipation in surrounding medium

  5. Issues in damping identification • Absence of a mathematical model for all damping forces • Computational time • Incompleteness of data • Generally small effect on dynamics

  6. Identification techniques • Techniques for identifying the viscous damping matrix • Perturbation method • Inversion of receptance matrix • Lancaster’s formula • Energy-dissipation method Prandina, M., Mottershead, J. E., and Bonisoli, E., An assessment of damping identification methods, Journal of Sound and Vibration (in press), 2009.

  7. Theory • The energy equation can be derived The new method is based on the energy-dissipation method, starting from the equations of motion of a MDOF system

  8. Theory In the case of periodic response, the contribution of conservative forces to the total energy over a full cycle of periodic motion is zero. So if T1 = T(period of the response) And the energy equation can be reduced to

  9. Diagonal viscous damping matrix The simplest case is a system with diagonal viscous damping matrix. In this case the energy equation becomes

  10. Diagonal viscous damping matrix

  11. Underdetermined system • The energy system of equations is usually underdetermined since the number of DOF can be greater than the number of tests. To solve the problem there are different options: • Change the parameterization of the damping matrix • Increase the number of different excitations • Define a criterion to select the “best” columns of matrix A

  12. Smallest angle criterion Angle between a columnaiof matrix A and the vector e Similarly, an angle between a set of columns B and the vector e can be calculated using SVD an QR algorithm

  13. Numerical example Accelerometers (dof 7, 11 and 19) Dashpots (dof 3, 5, 13 and 17) 10 18 20 4 6 14 16 2 8 12 9 17 19 3 5 13 15 1 7 11

  14. Procedure • Accelerations are measured on DOF 7, 11 and 19 for a set of 8 different excitations at frequencies close to first 8 modes, random noise is added. • Velocities in all DOF are obtained by expanding these 3 measurements using the undamped mode shapes • Best columns ofA are selected using smallest angle criterion • The energy equation is solved using least squares non-negative algorithm (to assure the identified matrix is non-negative definite)

  15. Results Case 1

  16. Results Case 2

  17. Results 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 N=1 N=3 N=2 0.107 0.151 0.059 0.212 0.127 0.055

  18. Results Case 2 – Damping factors

  19. Nonlinear identification • The method can be applied to identify any damping in the form In case of viscous damping and Coulomb friction together, for example, the energy equation can be written as

  20. Nonlinear identification New matrix A Viscous Coulomb Friction

  21. Experiment setup

  22. Magnetic dashpot

  23. Experiment procedure • The structure without magnetic dashpot is excited with a set of 16 different excitations with frequencies close to those of the first 8 modes • The complete set of accelerations is measured and an energy-equivalent viscous damping matrix is identified as the offset structural damping • The measurement is repeated with the magnetic dashpot attached with the purpose of locating and identifying it

  24. Experiment procedure • Velocities are derived from accelerometer signals • Matrix A and vector e are calculated, the energy dissipated by the offset damping is subtracted from the total energy • The energy equation (In this case overdetermined, since there are 16 excitations and 10 DOFs) is solved using least square technique

  25. Experimental results • Magnetic viscous dashpot on DOF 9

  26. Further experiments • Further experiments currently running will include more magnetic dashpots in different DOFs. • They will also include nonlinear sources of damping such as Coulomb friction devices.

  27. Coulomb friction device

  28. Advantages of the new method • Estimation of mass and stiffness matrices is not required if a complete set of measurements is available • Can identify non-viscous damping in the form • Robustness against noise and modal incompleteness • Spatial incompleteness can be overcome using expansion techniques

  29. Conclusions • New energy-based method has been proposed • Numerical simulation has validated the theory • Initial experiments on real structure give reasonably good results, further experiments are currently running

  30. Future works • Coulomb friction experiment • Extend the method to include material damping • Try different parameterizations of the damping matrices

  31. Acknowledgements • Prof John E Mottershead • Prof Ken Badcock • Dr Simon James • Marie Curie Actions

More Related