A Perturbation Approach to Bifurcation Analysis and Limit-Cycle Amplitudes for Brake Squeal Problems

2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hartmut Hetzler ◽  
Theodore E. Simos ◽  
George Psihoyios ◽  
Ch. Tsitouras
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lukas Woiwode ◽  
Alexander F. Vakakis ◽  
Malte Krack

Abstract It is widely known that dry friction damping can bound the self-excited vibrations induced by negative damping. The vibrations typically take the form of (periodic) limit cycle oscillations. However, when the intensity of the self-excitation reaches a condition of maximum friction damping, the limit cycle loses stability via a fold bifurcation. The behavior may become even more complicated in the presence of any internal resonance conditions. In this work, we consider a two-degree-of-freedom system with an elastic dry friction element (Jenkins element) having closely spaced natural frequencies. The symmetric in-phase motion is subjected to self-excitation by negative (viscous) damping, while the symmetric out-of-phase motion is positively damped. In a previous work, we showed that the limit cycle loses stability via a secondary Hopf bifurcation, giving rise to quasi-periodic oscillations. A further increase of the self-excitation intensity may lead to chaos and finally divergence, long before reaching the fold bifurcation point of the limit cycle. In this work, we use the method of Complexification-Averaging to obtain the slow flow in the neighborhood of the limit cycle. This way, we show that chaos is reached via a cascade of period doubling bifurcations on invariant tori. Using perturbation calculus, we establish analytical conditions for the emergence of the secondary Hopf bifurcation and approximate analytically its location. In particular, we show that non-periodic oscillations are the typical case for prominent nonlinearity, mild coupling (controlling the proximity of the modes) and sufficiently light damping. The range of validity of the analytical results presented herein is thoroughly assessed numerically. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first work that shows how the challenging Jenkins element can be treated formally within a consistent perturbation approach in order to derive closed-form analytical results for limit cycles and their bifurcations.


Author(s):  
Luis F Razon

One of the most thoroughly studied systems in chemical engineering is the classic problem of a first-order exothermic reaction in a diabatic CSTR. In this paper, an extension of the classic problem, in which the reactor vessel temperature varies independently of its contents, is considered. A bifurcation analysis showed that a CSTR in an oscillatory state may be stabilized by the use of a reactor with the appropriate combination of thermal characteristics. Stabilization of an oscillatory state was demonstrated for a variety of scenarios that had been previously shown by Uppal, Ray and Poore to be representative cases of phase diagrams that exhibit limit-cycle behavior.


Author(s):  
Hartmut Hetzler

This article presents a perturbation approach for the bifurcation analysis of MDoF vibration systems with gyroscopic and circulatory contributions, as they naturally arise from problems involving moving continua and sliding friction. Based on modal data of the underlying linear system, a multiple scales technique is utilized in order to find equations for the nonlinear amplitudes of the critical mode. The presented method is suited for an algorithmic implementation using commercial software and does not involve costly time-integration. As an engineering example, the bifurcation behaviour of a MDoF disk brake model is investigated. Sub- and supercritical Hopf-bifurcations are found and stationary nonlinear amplitudes are presented depending on operating parameters of the brake as well as of tribological parameters of the contact.


Author(s):  
Georg A. Mensah ◽  
Jonas P. Moeck

The most straightforward way to assess the thermoacoustic stability of a combustion system is based on modal approaches. The modes are typically computed from linearized equations in the frequency domain, such as the Helmholtz equation. Due to the linear character, nonlinear saturation effects cannot be computed with such models. Flame describing functions have been suggested to fill this gap. They describe the flame response in an amplitude-dependent manner and have been successfully used in recent work for the prediction of limit-cycle amplitudes in single-burner systems and annular combustors. This paper presents a more efficient approach of computing limit-cycle amplitudes of spinning thermoacoustic modes in an annular combustion chamber. As one important feature, adjoint perturbation theory is utilized for the solution of the thermoacoustic Helmholtz equation associated with a flame describing function. This avoids iterations over different amplitude levels to find the limit cycle amplitude, i.e., the amplitude level at which the modal growth rate is zero, as required in previous approaches. Moreover, based on the discrete rotational symmetry of the system, the computation is also accelerated by means of Bloch-wave theory, which reduces computations for annular combustors to a single burner/flame segment. Results for a generic model and a laboratory-scale annular combustion system are presented and discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (14) ◽  
pp. 2050205
Author(s):  
Zuchong Shang ◽  
Yuanhua Qiao ◽  
Lijuan Duan ◽  
Jun Miao

In this paper, a type of predator–prey model with simplified Holling type IV functional response is improved by adding the nonlinear Michaelis–Menten type prey harvesting to explore the dynamics of the predator–prey system. Firstly, the conditions for the existence of different equilibria are analyzed, and the stability of possible equilibria is investigated to predict the final state of the system. Secondly, bifurcation behaviors of this system are explored, and it is found that saddle-node and transcritical bifurcations occur on the condition of some parameter values using Sotomayor’s theorem; the first Lyapunov constant is computed to determine the stability of the bifurcated limit cycle of Hopf bifurcation; repelling and attracting Bogdanov–Takens bifurcation of codimension 2 is explored by calculating the universal unfolding near the cusp based on two-parameter bifurcation analysis theorem, and hence there are different parameter values for which the model has a limit cycle, or a homoclinic loop; it is also predicted that the heteroclinic bifurcation may occur as the parameter values vary by analyzing the isoclinic of the improved system. Finally, numerical simulations are done to verify the theoretical analysis.


2019 ◽  
Vol 365 (3) ◽  
pp. 935-942 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maximilian Engel ◽  
Jeroen S. W. Lamb ◽  
Martin Rasmussen

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