Harvesting under transient conditions: harvested energy as a proxy for optimal resonance frequency detuning

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taylor D. Hynds ◽  
Jeffrey L. Kauffman
Author(s):  
Garrett K. Lopp ◽  
Jeffrey L. Kauffman

For systems subjected to linear frequency sweep excitation, piezoelectric-based resonance frequency detuning provides vibration reduction by altering the stiffness state of the material as it passes through resonance. This vibration reduction technique applies to turbomachinery experiencing changes in rotation speed, for example on spool-up and spool-down. The peak response dynamics are determined by the system’s sweep rate, modal damping ratio, electromechanical coupling coefficient, and, most importantly, the frequency at which the stiffness state is altered. An analytical approach is employed to solve the nondimensional single degree of freedom equation of motion and is scaled to incorporate the altered system frequency following the stiffness state switch. This paper provides an extensive study over a range of sweep rates, damping ratios, and electromechanical coupling coefficients to determine the optimal frequency switch trigger that minimizes the response envelope. This switch trigger is primarily a function of the electromechanical coupling coefficient and the phase of vibration at which the switch occurs. As the coupling coefficient increases, the switch trigger decreases and is approximately linear with the square of this coupling coefficient. Furthermore, as with other state-switching techniques, the optimal frequency switch occurs when the phase of vibration is at the point of maximum displacement, or peak strain energy.


2018 ◽  
Vol 140 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Garrett K. Lopp ◽  
Jeffrey L. Kauffman

This paper extends the resonance frequency detuning (RFD) vibration reduction approach to cases of turbomachinery blade mistuning. Using a lumped parameter mistuned blade model with included piezoelectric elements, this paper presents an analytical solution of the blade vibration in response to frequency sweep excitation; direct numerical integration confirms the accuracy of this solution. A Monte Carlo statistical analysis provides insight regarding vibration reduction performance over a range of parameters of interest such as the degree of blade mistuning, linear excitation sweep rate, inherent damping ratio, and the difference between the open-circuit (OC) and short-circuit (SC) stiffness states. RFD reduces vibration across all degrees of blade mistuning as well as the entire range of sweep rates tested. Detuning also maximizes vibration reduction performance when applied to systems with low inherent damping and large electromechanical coupling.


2015 ◽  
Vol 138 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Garrett K. Lopp ◽  
Jeffrey L. Kauffman

Resonance frequency detuning (RFD) reduces vibration of systems subjected to frequency sweep excitation by altering the structural stiffness state as the excitation frequency passes through resonance. This vibration reduction technique applies to turbomachinery experiencing changes in rotation speed, for example, on spool-up and spool-down, and can be achieved through the inclusion of piezoelectric material and manipulation of its electrical boundary conditions. Key system parameters—the excitation sweep rate, modal damping ratio, electromechanical coupling coefficient, and, most importantly, the switch trigger that initiates the stiffness state switch (represented here in terms of excitation frequency)—determine the peak response dynamics. This paper exploits an analytical solution to a nondimensional single degree-of-freedom equation of motion to provide this blade response and recasts the equation in scaled form to include the altered system dynamics following the stiffness state switch. An extensive study over a range of sweep rates, damping ratios, and electromechanical coupling coefficients reveals the optimal frequency switch trigger that minimizes the peak of the blade response envelope. This switch trigger is primarily a function of the electromechanical coupling coefficient and the phase of vibration at which the switch occurs. As the coupling coefficient increases, the frequency-based switch trigger decreases, approximately linearly with the square of the coupling coefficient. Furthermore, as with other state-switching techniques, the optimal stiffness switch occurs on peak strain energy; however, the degradation in vibration reduction performance associated with a switch occurring at a nonoptimal phase is negligible for slow sweep rates and low modal damping.


Author(s):  
Garrett K. Lopp ◽  
Jeffrey L. Kauffman

Turbomachinery blade technology has recently trended towards the use of monolithic bladed disks. Although offering a wealth of benefits, this construction removes the blade attachment interface present in the conventional design, thus unintentionally removing a source of friction-based damping needed to counteract large vibrations during resonance passages. This issue is further exacerbated for blade mistuning, which is well-known to induce vibration localization with correspondingly larger vibration magnitudes. Recently, an alternative method to reduce vibration, termed Resonance Frequency Detuning (RFD), utilizes the variable stiffness properties of piezoelectric materials embedded on-blade to detune the response when approaching a resonance crossing, thus resulting in reduced vibration. For a single-degree-of-freedom (SDOF) system, the vibration reduction performance and the optimal stiffness state switching is well-defined. Previously, RFD has been experimentally validated on a representative blade for a sufficiently well-separated vibration mode, thus satisfying the SDOF assumption. No such experimental validation currently exists for a system with closely-spaced modes or, more specifically, applied to blade mistuning. This work utilizes an academic blisk machined in the form of 8 blades attached to a central hub. Each blade incorporates two collocated piezoelectric patches located near the blade root: one patch provides the stiffness state modulation, while the other patch provides actuation to mimic engine order excitations. For the forcing configuration studied, experimental results show qualitative agreement to numerical results with the vibratory response associated with the optimal stiffness state switch showing reductions across all blades.


Author(s):  
Garrett K. Lopp ◽  
Jeffrey L. Kauffman

This paper extends the Resonance Frequency Detuning vibration reduction approach by analyzing the performance in cases of turbomachinery blade mistuning. A lumped parameter mistuned blade model with included piezoelectric elements is utilized and an analytical solution for frequency sweep excitation is presented and validated using direct numerical integration. A Monte Carlo statistical analysis is then conducted to provide insight regarding vibration reduction performance over a range of parameters of interest such as the degree of blade mistuning, linear excitation sweep rate, damping ratio, and the difference between the open- and short-circuit stiffness states. Vibration reduction is shown to exist across all degrees of blade mistuning as well as the entire range of sweep rates tested. This vibration reduction performance is also maximized for systems with low inherent damping and large electromechanical coupling values.


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