scholarly journals Free Response of a Rotational Nonlinear Energy Sink: Complete Dissipation of Initial Energy for Small Initial Rectilinear Displacements

2020 ◽  
Vol 88 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ke Ding ◽  
Arne J. Pearlstein

Abstract For two combinations of a dimensionless rotational damping parameter and a dimensionless inertial coupling parameter, we consider free response of a rectilinearly vibrating linearly sprung primary mass inertially coupled to damped rotation of a second mass, for which Gendelman et al. (2012, “Dynamics of an Eccentric Rotational Nonlinear Energy Sink,” ASME J. Appl. Mech. 79(1), 011012) developed equations of motion in the context of a rotational nonlinear energy sink (NES) with no direct damping of the rectilinear motion. For dimensionless initial rectilinear displacements comparable with those considered by Gendelman et al., we identify a region in the motionless projection of the initial condition space (i.e., for zero values of the initial rectilinear and rotational velocities) in which every initial condition leads to a previously unrecognized zero-energy solution, with all initial energy dissipated by rotation. We also show that the long-time nonrotating, rectilinear solutions of the type found by Gendelman et al. are (orbitally) stable only in limited ranges of amplitude. Finally, we show how direct viscous damping of rectilinear motion of the primary mass affects dissipation, and that results with no direct rectilinear dissipation provide excellent guidance for performance when direct rectilinear dissipation occurs. Some applications are discussed.

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-59
Author(s):  
Ke Ding ◽  
Arne Pearlstein

Abstract Free response of a rotational nonlinear energy sink (NES) inertially coupled to a linear oscillator is investigated for dimensionless initial rectilinear displacements ranging from just above the smallest amplitude at which nonrotating, harmonically rectilinear motion is unstable absent direct rectilinear damping, up to the next-largest amplitude at which such motion is orbitally stable. With motionless initial conditions (MICs), i.e., initial velocity of the primary mass and initial angular velocity of the NES mass both zero, predicted behavior for two previously investigated combinations of the dimensionless parameters (characterizing rotational damping, and coupling of rectilinear and rotational motions) differs strongly from that found at smaller initial displacements (2021, J. Appl. Mech. 88, 011005). For both combinations, a wide range of MICs leads to solutions displaying transient chaos and depending sensitively on initial conditions, giving rise to fractality and riddling in the relationship between initial conditions and asymptotic solutions. Absent direct rectilinear damping of the linear oscillator, for one combination of parameters there exists a wide range of MICs with trajectories leading to time-harmonic, orbitally stable “quot;special”quot; solutions with a single amplitude, but no MICs are found for which all initial energy is dissipated. For the other combination, no such special solutions are found, but there exist MICs for which all initial energy is dissipated. With direct rectilinear damping, sensitivity extends to a measure of settling time, which can be extremely sensitive to initial conditions. A statistical approach to this sensitivity is discussed, along with implications for design and implementation.


2021 ◽  
pp. 107754632199358
Author(s):  
Ali Fasihi ◽  
Majid Shahgholi ◽  
Saeed Ghahremani

The potential of absorbing and harvesting energy from a two-degree-of-freedom airfoil using an attachment of a nonlinear energy sink and a piezoelectric energy harvester is investigated. The equations of motion of the airfoil coupled with the attachment are solved using the harmonic balance method. Solutions obtained by this method are compared to the numerical ones of the pseudo-arclength continuation method. The effects of parameters of the integrated nonlinear energy sink-piezoelectric attachment, namely, the attachment location, nonlinear energy sink mass, nonlinear energy sink damping, and nonlinear energy sink stiffness on the dynamical behavior of the airfoil system are studied for both subcritical and supercritical Hopf bifurcation cases. Analyses demonstrate that absorbing vibration and harvesting energy are profoundly affected by the nonlinear energy sink parameters and the location of the attachment.


Author(s):  
Youzuo Jin ◽  
Kefu Liu ◽  
Deli Li ◽  
Liuyang Xiong ◽  
Lihua Tang

Abstract In this paper, a non-traditional variant nonlinear energy sink (NES) is developed for simultaneous vibration suppression and energy harvesting in a broad frequency band. The non-traditional variant NES consists of a cantilever beam attached by a pair of magnets at its free end, a pair of the so-called continuous-contact blocks, and a pair of coils. The beam is placed between the continuous-contact blocks. The constraint of the continuous-contact blocks forces the beam to deflect nonlinearly. Each of the magnet-coil pairs forms an electromagnetic energy harvester. Different from a traditional way that attaches the coils to the primary mass, the developed setup has the coils fixed to the base. First, the developed apparatus is described. Subsequently, the system modeling and parameter identification are addressed. The performance of the apparatus under transient responses is examined by using computer simulation. The results show that the proposed apparatus behaves similarly as the NES with the following features: 1:1 resonance, targeted energy transfer, initial energy dependence, etc.


2013 ◽  
Vol 698 ◽  
pp. 89-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Etienne Gourc ◽  
Sébastien Seguy ◽  
Guilhem Michon ◽  
Alain Berlioz

This paper presents the interest of an original absorber of vibration in order to reduce chatter vibration in turning process. The device is composed of a linear oscillator corresponding to a flexible cutting tool subject to chatter strongly coupled to a Nonlinear Energy Sink (NES), with purely cubic stiffness. The novelty of this work is the use of a nonlinear cutting law, more accurate for modeling the cutting process. The delayed equations of motion are analyzed using a combination of the method of multiple scales and harmonic balance. Different types of responses regimes are revealed such as periodic response and also Strongly Modulated Response (SMR). Analytic results are then compared with numerical simulations. Finally, the potential of the NES is demonstrated to control chatter in turning process.


2018 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 869-886
Author(s):  
P. KUMAR ◽  
S. NARAYANAN ◽  
S. GUPTA

This study investigates the phenomenon of targeted energy transfer (TET) from a linear oscillator to a nonlinear attachment behaving as a nonlinear energy sink for both transient and stochastic excitations. First, the dynamics of the underlying Hamiltonian system under deterministic transient loading is studied. Assuming that the transient dynamics can be partitioned into slow and fast components, the governing equations of motion corresponding to the slow flow dynamics are derived and the behaviour of the system is analysed. Subsequently, the effect of noise on the slow flow dynamics of the system is investigated. The Itô stochastic differential equations for the noisy system are derived and the corresponding Fokker–Planck equations are numerically solved to gain insights into the behaviour of the system on TET. The effects of the system parameters as well as noise intensity on the optimal regime of TET are studied. The analysis reveals that the interaction of nonlinearities and noise enhances the optimal TET regime as predicted in deterministic analysis.


Author(s):  
Mohammad A. Al-Shudeifat ◽  
Lawrence A. Bergman ◽  
Alexander F. Vakakis

Passive nonlinear targeted energy transfer (TET) is addressed here by investigating a lightweight rotating nonlinear energy sink (NES). The rotating sink mass has an essentially nonlinear inertial coupling with the two degree-of-freedom linear system (the primary test structure). The proposed rotating NES is numerically investigated where it is found to passively absorb and rapidly dissipate a considerable portion of the initial energy induced by impulse to the linear structure. The parameters of the rotating NES are optimized for the best performance in the vicinity of intermediate and high loads. The fundamental mechanism for significant energy transfer to the NES is its rotational mode; the oscillatory mode of the NES dissipates far less energy. The frequency-energy dependences are investigated through the frequency-energy plot (FEP). Early and strong resonance capture at the lowest modal frequency is observed between the rotator and the structure, at which a significant portion of the induced energy is transferred and dissipated by the rotator. The performance of this device is found to be comparable to existing, stiffness-based NES designs. However, this device is less complicated and more compact.


Author(s):  
Arash Khalatbari ◽  
Amir Jalali ◽  
Habib Ahmadi ◽  
Kamran Foroutan

In this paper, one of the most efficient passive absorbers, called nonlinear energy sink (NES), is analytically studied. A two-degree-of-freedom system is considered which consists of a linear oscillator (LO) with a base excitation and an NES, called grounded NES (GNES), which is connected to the ground with a nonlinear spring. In this study, we proposed a new arrangement of potential elements in GNES and studied invariant manifolds of the system, as well as the energy absorption performance of the NES. The system is considered in the vicinity of 1:1 resonance to investigate the strongly modulated response (SMR). To this end, after obtaining the equations of motion, the Manevitch complex variable and multiple scale method are applied to solve the equations, analytically. Then, the slow invariant manifold (SIM) is obtained. Also, the energy dissipation ratio of the NES and the percentage of the instantaneous total energy stored in the NES are calculated via the time-amplitude diagram. The results show that when the nonlinear effect decreases, the occurrence of energy pumping is less probable. Also, when the excitation amplitude decreases, the percentage of the instantaneous total energy stored in the NES increases as well as the amount of energy dissipation.


Author(s):  
Mohammad A. Al-Shudeifat

Enhanced nonlinear energy sink (NES) is addressed here by employing a non-traditional kind of a nonlinear restoring force. The usual nonlinear coupling element between the NES and the linear oscillator (LO) in the literature generates essentially nonlinear restoring force between the NES and the LO. Unlike Type I NES, here the nonlinear coupling force has varying components during the oscillation which appear in closed loops under the effect of damping terms. This NES attachment with the LO rapidly absorbs and immediately dissipates significant portion of the initial energy induced into the LO through a strong resonance capture between the NES and LO responses. The proposed design could also be promising for energy harvesting purposes. The obtained results by numerical simulation show that employing this type of nonlinear restoring force for passive targeted energy transfer (TET) is more promising than some other types of NESs in which purely cubic stiffness restoring forces have been incorporated.


2015 ◽  
Vol 137 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Etienne Gourc ◽  
Guilhem Michon ◽  
Sébastien Seguy ◽  
Alain Berlioz

Recently, it has been demonstrated that a vibro-impact type nonlinear energy sink (VI-NES) can be used efficiently to mitigate vibration of a linear oscillator (LO) under transient loading. The objective of this paper is to investigate theoretically and experimentally the potential of a VI-NES to mitigate vibrations of an LO subjected to a harmonic excitation (nevertheless, the presentation of an optimal VI-NES is beyond the scope of this paper). Due to the small mass ratio between the LO and the flying mass of the NES, the obtained equations of motion are analyzed using the method of multiple scales in the case of 1:1 resonance. It is shown that in addition to periodic response, system with VI-NES can exhibit strongly modulated response (SMR). Experimentally, the whole system is embedded on an electrodynamic shaker. The VI-NES is realized with a ball which is free to move in a cavity with a predesigned gap. The mass of the ball is less than 1% of the mass of the LO. The experiment confirms the existence of periodic and SMR regimes. A good agreement between theoretical and experimental results is observed.


Author(s):  
Xiaolin Li ◽  
Kefu Liu ◽  
Liuyang Xiong ◽  
Lihua Tang

In this paper a variant nonlinear energy sink (NES) is developed for the purpose of simultaneous vibration suppression and energy harvesting in a broad frequency band. The NES consists of a cantilever beam attached by a mass at its free end and a pair of so-called double-stop blocks. The beam is formed by a piezoelectric energy harvester and a thin steel plate. It is placed between the double-stop blocks. The constraint of the double-stop blocks forces the beam to deflect nonlinearly. First, the developed apparatus is described. Subsequently, system modeling and parameter identification are addressed. The performance of the apparatus under transient responses is examined through both numerical simulation and experimental study. The results show that the proposed apparatus behaves similarly as the NES with the following features: 1:1 resonance, targeted energy transfer, initial energy dependence, etc.


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