Vibrations of a Clamped Circular Plate Carrying Concentrated Mass

1951 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 349-352
Author(s):  
R. E. Roberson

Abstract The vibrations of a circular plate clamped at its edge and carrying a concentrated mass at its center are considered. The plate is excited by a motion of the framing, assumed rigid, to which it is clamped. The first four natural frequencies are displayed graphically as functions of mass ratio, and are calculated more precisely for μ = 0, μ = 0.05, and μ = 0.10. The motions of two subsystems with one degree of freedom are compared, one subsystem being driven by the framing and the other by the concentrated mass on the plate. The plate-mounted subsystem has a response in excess of the response of the framing-mounted subsystem if the framing is suddenly put into motion with constant velocity. Except in the neighborhood of their peaks, whose locations depend upon mass ratio, the subsystem resonance curves are depressed in height by increasing the mass ratio.

1951 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 280-282
Author(s):  
R. E. Roberson

Abstract The plate under consideration carries a concentrated mass at its center, which is struck impulsively in a direction perpendicular to the undisturbed plate face. Only circularly symmetric vibrations are considered. The solution is carried out by the use of the Laplace transform method, treating the concentrated mass as a plate-density impulse. The first four natural frequencies are displayed as functions of mass ratio, and the first mode shape is displayed for three mass ratios. The natural frequencies, particularly the higher, are shown to be very sensitive to changes in mass ratio at small values of the concentrated mass.


2011 ◽  
Vol 199-200 ◽  
pp. 1445-1450
Author(s):  
Hui Juan Ren ◽  
Mei Ping Sheng

The expression of NAVMI factor and the natural frequency of a circular plate, which is placed in a hole of an infinite grid wall with one side exposed to water, are derived from the viewpoint of the additional mass. 10 Nodes Gauss-Legender integration method and the iteration method are employed to obtain the numerical results of the NAVMI factors, AVMI factors and the natural frequencies. It can be found from the results that NAVMI factors of the first two order modes are far bigger than those of the other modes when the boundary condition of a circular plate is certain. The first two order modal NAVMI factors of the circular plate with clamped and simply supported boundary conditions are far bigger than those of the circular plate with free-edged boundary condition, and the NAVMI factors are almost the same for the three order or much higher order modes regardless of the boundary condition. It is also observed that the natural frequencies of the circular plate exposed to water are smaller than those exposed to air, and the natural frequencies of the circular plate exposed to water with both sides are smaller than those of the circular plate exposed to water with one side.


1988 ◽  
Vol 110 (1) ◽  
pp. 118-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. P. Mitchell ◽  
J. C. Bruch

A single-joint flexible robot arm consisting of one link and carrying an end effector is modeled by a continuous, uniform, clamped-free beam having a concentrated mass at the free end and being clamped at the other end to a compliant finite hub. The first six natural frequencies are given for various ratios of physical parameters. The modal shapes are also presented along with their orthogonality relationship. The limiting cases of some of the physical parameters are discussed.


1955 ◽  
Vol 59 (540) ◽  
pp. 850-852 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. E. D. Bishop

A convenient method is pointed out for calculating the response of a damped linear system with one degree of freedom to harmonic excitation. Results of such calculations are usually represented by the familiar “ resonance curves ”—one curve being plotted for each intensity of damping. These curves are not particularly convenient to use and Yates has overcome several of their defects by throwing them into a nomographic form. Yates' nomogram is based upon the concept of viscous damping and it does not give the information of a conventional set of resonance curves in that it relates to the velocity of vibration. By changing over to hysteretic damping, a nomogram of somewhat similar form may be constructed such that it gives amplitudes and phase angles of displacements while retaining the advantages, over resonance curves, of this form of representation.


2011 ◽  
Vol 255-260 ◽  
pp. 1830-1835 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gang Cheng ◽  
Quan Cheng ◽  
Wei Dong Wang

The paper concerns on the free vibrations of circular plate with arbitrary number of the mounted masses at arbitrary positions by using the integral equation method. A set of complete systems of orthogonal functions, which is constructed by Bessel functions of the first kind, is used to construct the Green's function of circular plates firstly. Then the eigenvalue problem of free vibration of circular plate carrying oscillators and elastic supports at arbitrary positions is transformed into the problem of integral equation by using the superposition theorem and the physical meaning of the Green’s function. And then the eigenvalue problem of integral equation is transformed into a standard eigenvalue problem of a matrix with infinite order. Numerical examples are presented.


(1) It is not so long ago that it was generally believed that the "classical" hydrodynamics, as dealing with perfect fluids, was, by reason of the very limitations implied in the term "perfect," incapable of explaining many of the observed facts of fluid motion. The paradox of d'Alembert, that a solid moving through a liquid with constant velocity experienced no resultant force, was in direct contradiction with the observed facts, and, among other things, made the lift on an aeroplane wing as difficult to explain as the drag. The work of Lanchester and Prandtl, however, showed that lift could be explained if there was "circulation" round the aerofoil. Of course, in a truly perfect fluid, this circulation could not be produced—it does need viscosity to originate it—but once produced, the lift follows from the theory appropriate to perfect fluids. It has thus been found possible to explain and calculate lift by means of the classical theory, viscosity only playing a significant part in the close neighbourhood ("grenzchicht") of the solid. It is proposed to show, in the present paper, how the presence of vortices in the fluid may cause a force to act on the solid, with a component in the line of motion, and so, at least partially, explain drag. It has long been realised that a body moving through a fluid sets up a train of eddies. The formation of these needs a supply of energy, ultimately dissipated by viscosity, which qualitatively explains the resistance experienced by the solid. It will be shown that the effect of these eddies is not confined to the moment of their birth, but that, so long as they exist, the resultant of the pressure on the solid does not vanish. This idea is not absolutely new; it appears in a recent paper by W. Müller. Müller uses some results due to M. Lagally, who calculates the resultant force on an immersed solid for a general fluid motion. The result, as far as it concerns vortices, contains their velocities relative to the solid. Despite this, the term — ½ ρq 2 only was used in the pressure equation, although the other term, ρ ∂Φ / ∂t , must exist on account of the motion. (There is, by Lagally's formulæ, no force without relative motion.) The analysis in the present paper was undertaken partly to supply this omission and partly to check the result of some work upon two-dimensional potential problems in general that it is hoped to publish shortly.


1987 ◽  
Vol 109 (2) ◽  
pp. 148-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. P. Nigam ◽  
M. Malik

This paper is concerned with the modeling of the human body as a spring mass system. Based on certain assumptions, an analysis for evaluating the mass and stiffness values of the model is developed. As an illustration of the modeling procedure, a 15-degree-of-freedom model of a male body is considered. The computed natural frequencies of the model are found to be within the range of available experimental values.


2013 ◽  
Vol 1493 ◽  
pp. 281-286
Author(s):  
Keisuke Yoshimura ◽  
Tetsuya Hashimoto ◽  
Hiroshi Katsumata

ABSTRACTOptical band-gap and cathode luminescence (CL) properties of anatase TiO2 nanopowders mixed with γ- Al2O3 powders by planetary ball mill were evaluated as a function of a powder mass ratio (x=Al2O3/TiO2) of 0 to 0.5 and their correlation with XRD spectra was also investigated. The optical band-gap of TiO2 increased from 3.36 eV to 3.41eV with increasing milling time (tm) up to 600 min, which was in good agreement with the blue shifts observed in the CL spectra with increasing tm and it was interpreted as a quantum size effect. In addition, the optical band-gap of TiO2 powders mixed with Al2O3 with tm=60min greatly increased from 3.36 eV to 3.48 eV with increasing x up to x=0.5. On the other hand, the optical band-gap of all the powders was decreased by annealing at temperatures above 600°C, which was evidenced by the XRD spectra to be due to the growth of grain size.


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