scholarly journals Hybrid Method of Modal Analysis and Laser Shock Scanning to Visualize the Pyroshock Propagation in a Tension Joint

2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Yong-Woon Kim ◽  
Jae-Kyeong Jang ◽  
Jung-Ryul Lee ◽  
Hak-Seong Gim

The use of pyrodevices in the aerospace industry has been increasing because of their ability to implement separation missions with a small weight, for example, space launchers, spacecrafts, and missiles. During operation, pyrodevices generate pyroshock, which causes failures of electronic devices. Recently, a pyroshock simulation method using laser shock has been developed to evaluate the risk of pyroshock before flight mission. However, depending on the structure, the laser shock showed some difficulty simulating pyroshock in the low-frequency regime accompanying vibration. Therefore, in this study, we developed a hybrid method of numerical modal analysis and laser shock-based experimental simulation to visualize the pyroshock propagation in all the relevant frequency regimes. For the proof of concept of the proposed method, we performed experiments of explosive bolt-induced shock and pyrolock-induced shock in the open-box-type tension joint and compared the hybrid simulation results with actual pyroshock. From the results, we obtained the simulated time-domain signal with an averaged peak-to-peak acceleration difference (PAD) of 11.2% and the shock response spectrum (SRS) with an averaged mean acceleration difference (MAD) of 28.5%. In addition, we were able to visualize the simulation results in the temporal and spectral domains to compare the pyroshock induced by each pyrodevice. A comparison of the simulations showed that the pyrolock had an impulse level of 1/12 compared to the explosion bolt. In particular, it was confirmed that the pyrolock-induced shock at the near field can cause damage to the electronic equipment despite a smaller impulse than that of the explosive bolt-induced shock. The hybrid method developed in this paper demonstrates that it is possible to simulate pyroshock for all the frequency regimes in complex specimens and to evaluate the risk in the time and frequency domain.

1984 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 315-324
Author(s):  
David M. Boore

Abstract More information about ground motion can be extracted from seismoscope records than a single point on a response spectrum. To demonstrate this, the relation between seismoscope response and Wood-Anderson instrument output and peak horizontal ground velocity has been studied by simulating the various responses for a range of distances and magnitudes. The simulations show that the relation used by Jennings and Kanamori (1979) to convert from peak seismoscope readings to the peak response of a Wood-Anderson instrument has a distance- and magnitude-dependent systematic error. The error is negligible, however, for modern seismoscopes at distances of a few tens of kilometers. At several hundred kilometers, the relation underestimates the Wood-Anderson response by as much as a factor of two. The spread in Jennings and Kanamori's estimate of ML for the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, recorded on seismoscopes having relatively low natural frequencies (0.26 and 0.5 Hz), is reduced by the results in this paper—the upper value, from a seismoscope in Carson City, Nevada, at 290 km from the fault, going from ML = 7.2 to ML = 7.0 and the lower value, from Yountville, California (R ≈ 60 km), going from about 6.3 to 6.4. About 0.3 units of the remaining spread may be due to local geologic site conditions. If the 0.3 units is distributed equally between the Yountville and Carson City recordings, the estimates of ML for the San Francisco earthquake then become 6.5 and 6.8, somewhat lower than Jennings and Kanamori's final estimates of 634 to 7. Although the error in using the relation of Jennings and Kanamori to estimate Wood-Anderson response was at most a factor of 1.6 for the 1906 earthquake, the error can be substantially larger for smaller earthquakes recorded on similar low frequency seismoscopes. The relation between Wood-Anderson and seismoscope response used by Jennings and Kanamori can be combined with an empirical relation between peak horizontal velocity and Wood-Anderson response to predict peak velocity from seismocope recordings. The simulations show that this relation (vmax = 8.1Awa, where vmax is the peak horizontal velocity in centimeters/second and Awa is one-half the range of the Wood-Anderson motion in meters) forms a lower bound for estimates of peak velocity from seismoscope recordings. The relation is good for stations within about 100 km of earthquakes with moment magnitudes of about 4.5 to 6.5, and it underestimates peak velocity by factors up to 2 or 3 for larger earthquakes at distances within 100 km. An application of the simulation method to the 1976 Guatemala earthquake (moment magnitude = 7.6) results in 37 cm/sec as a lower bound to vmax, with 66 cm/sec as a more likely value, from the seismocope recording in Guatemala City (approximately 25 km from the Motagua fault).


2011 ◽  
Vol 121-126 ◽  
pp. 2304-2307
Author(s):  
Tie Jun Wu ◽  
Hong Jun Wang

The residual stress distribution of fillet of the diesel engine crankshaft on laser shock processing was analyzed by ANSYS software. The simulation results compared with the experimental data, to get results as follows: the simulation results were basically consistent with the experimental data. This fully proved that the finite element simulation method and related simulation parameters were correct. The parameters of laser impacting were optimized by ANSYS simulation, and the residual stress favorable distribution of the crankshaft fillet was obtained.


2004 ◽  
Vol 471-472 ◽  
pp. 860-864 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jian Zhong Zhou ◽  
Yong Kang Zhang ◽  
Dun Wen Zuo ◽  
Chao Jun Yang ◽  
Lan Cai

Laser shock forming (LSF) is a new technique realized by applying a compressive shock wave generated by laser shocking on the surface of sheet metal. It is a mechanical, not a thermal process. After briefly reviewing the mechanism of LSF, instead of previously reported experimental research, a numerical simulation method of sheet deforming caused by laser shock waves is presented. The process of laser-shock plastic deforming of sheet metal is simulated with ABAQUS software, the simulation results are compared and agree well with the experiments on the condition of single laser shocking. It is shown that numerical simulation is available for optimizing laser parameters and predicting the sheet deformation contour of laser shock forming process.


2015 ◽  
Vol 23 (04) ◽  
pp. 1540007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guolong Liang ◽  
Wenbin Zhao ◽  
Zhan Fan

Direction of arrival (DOA) estimation is of great interest due to its wide applications in sonar, radar and many other areas. However, the near-field interference is always presented in the received data, which may result in degradation of DOA estimation. An approach which can suppress the near-field interference and preserve the far-field signal desired by using a spatial matrix filter is proposed in this paper and some typical DOA estimation algorithms are adjusted to match the filtered data. Simulation results show that the approach can improve capability of DOA estimation under near-field inference efficiently.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 2182
Author(s):  
Baden Parr ◽  
Mathew Legg ◽  
Stuart Bradley ◽  
Fakhrul Alam

Grape yield estimation has traditionally been performed using manual techniques. However, these tend to be labour intensive and can be inaccurate. Computer vision techniques have therefore been developed for automated grape yield estimation. However, errors occur when grapes are occluded by leaves, other bunches, etc. Synthetic aperture radar has been investigated to allow imaging through leaves to detect occluded grapes. However, such equipment can be expensive. This paper investigates the potential for using ultrasound to image through leaves and identify occluded grapes. A highly directional low frequency ultrasonic array composed of ultrasonic air-coupled transducers and microphones is used to image grapes through leaves. A fan is used to help differentiate between ultrasonic reflections from grapes and leaves. Improved resolution and detail are achieved with chirp excitation waveforms and near-field focusing of the array. The overestimation in grape volume estimation using ultrasound reduced from 222% to 112% compared to the 3D scan obtained using photogrammetry or from 56% to 2.5% compared to a convex hull of this 3D scan. This also has the added benefit of producing more accurate canopy volume estimations which are important for common precision viticulture management processes such as variable rate applications.


2015 ◽  
Vol 1092-1093 ◽  
pp. 356-361
Author(s):  
Peng Fei Zhang ◽  
Lian Guang Liu

With the application and development of Power Electronics, HVDC is applied more widely China. However, HVDC system has the possibilities to cause subsynchronous torsional vibration interaction with turbine generator shaft mechanical system. This paper simply introduces the mechanism, analytical methods and suppression measures of subsynchronous oscillation. Then it establishes a power plant model in islanding model using PSCAD, and analyzes the effects of the number and output of generators to SSO, and verifies the effect of SEDC and SSDC using time-domain simulation method. Simulation results show that the more number and output of generators is detrimental to the stable convergence of subsynchronous oscillation, and SEDC、SSDC can restrain unstable SSO, avoid divergence of SSO, ensure the generators and system operate safely and stably


2021 ◽  
pp. 002029402110130
Author(s):  
Guan Chen ◽  
Zhiren Zhu ◽  
Jun Hu

This study proposed a simple and effective response spectrum-compatible ground motions simulation method to mitigate the scarcity of ground motions on seismic hazard analysis base on wavelet-based multi-resolution analysis. The feasibility of the proposed method is illustrated with two recorded ground motions in El Mayor-Cucapah earthquake. The results show that the proposed method enriches the ground motions exponentially. The simulated ground motions agree well with the attenuation characteristics of seismic ground motion without modulating process. Moreover, the pseudo-acceleration response spectrum error between the recorded ground motion and the average of the simulated ground motions is 5.2%, which fulfills the requirement prescribed in Eurocode 8 for artificially simulated ground motions. Besides, the cumulative power spectra between the simulated and recorded ground motions agree well on both high- and low-frequency regions. Therefore, the proposed method offers a feasible alternative in enriching response spectrum-compatible ground motions, especially on the regions with insufficient ground motions.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manop Yingram ◽  
Suttichai Premrudeepreechacharn

The mainly used local islanding detection methods may be classified as active and passive methods. Passive methods do not perturb the system but they have larger nondetection zones, whereas active methods have smaller nondetection zones but they perturb the system. In this paper, a new hybrid method is proposed to solve this problem. An over/undervoltage (passive method) has been used to initiate an undervoltage shift (active method), which changes the undervoltage shift of inverter, when the passive method cannot have a clear discrimination between islanding and other events in the system. Simulation results on MATLAB/SIMULINK show that over/undervoltage and undervoltage shifts of hybrid islanding detection method are very effective because they can determine anti-islanding condition very fast.ΔP/P>38.41% could determine anti-islanding condition within 0.04 s;ΔP/P<-24.39% could determine anti-islanding condition within 0.04 s;-24.39%≤ΔP/P≤ 38.41% could determine anti-islanding condition within 0.08 s. This method perturbed the system, only in the case of-24.39% ≤ΔP/P ≤38.41% at which the control system of inverter injected a signal of undervoltage shift as necessary to check if the occurrence condition was an islanding condition or not.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 3402
Author(s):  
Jan Slacik ◽  
Petr Mlynek ◽  
Martin Rusz ◽  
Petr Musil ◽  
Lukas Benesl ◽  
...  

The popularity of the Power Line Communication (PLC) system has decreased due to significant deficiencies in the technology itself, even though new wire installation is not required. In particular, regarding the request for high-speed throughput to fulfill smart-grid requirements, Broadband Power Line (BPLC) can be considered. This paper approaches PLC technology as an object of simulation experimentation in the Broadband Power Line Communication (BPLC) area. Several experimental measurements in a real environment are also given. This paper demonstrates these experimental simulation results as potential mechanisms for creating a complex simulation tool for various PLC technologies focusing on communication with end devices such as sensors and meters. The aim is to demonstrate the potential and limits of BPLC technology for implementation in Smart Grids or Smart Metering applications.


2011 ◽  
Vol 464 ◽  
pp. 627-631
Author(s):  
Jie Zhang ◽  
Ai Hua Sun ◽  
Le Zhu ◽  
Xiang Gu

Welding residual stress is one of the main factors that affect the strength and life of components. In order to explore the effect on residual stress of welding line by laser shock processing, finite element analysis software ANSYS is used to simulate the welding process, to calculate the distribution of welding residual stress field. On this basis, then AYSYS/LS-DYNA is used to simulate the laser shock processing on welding line. Simulation results show that residual stress distributions of weld region, heat-affected region and matrix by laser shock processing are clearly improved, and the tensile stress of weld region effectively reduce or eliminate. The simulation results and experimental results are generally consistent, it offer reasons for parameter optimization of welding and laser shock processing by finite element analysis software.


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