The usage of hermite polynomial in the calculation of structural dynamic responses

1988 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 241-251
Author(s):  
Zhang Yi-song ◽  
Xu Yin-ge ◽  
Gao Dc-ping
2021 ◽  
pp. 136943322110339
Author(s):  
Jian Guo ◽  
Changliang Xiao ◽  
Jiantao Li

A hill with a lattice transmission tower presents complex wind field characteristics. The commonly used computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations are difficult to analyze the wind resistance and dynamic responses of the transmission tower due to structural complexity. In this study, wind tunnel tests and numerical simulations are conducted to analyze the wind field of the hill and the dynamic responses of the transmission tower built on it. The hill models with different slopes are investigated by wind tunnel tests to measure the wind field characteristics, such as mean speed and turbulence intensity. The study shows that the existence of a transmission tower reduces the wind speed on the leeward slope significantly but has little effect on the windward slope. To study the dynamic behavior of the transmission tower, a hybrid analysis procedure is used by introducing the measured experimental wind information to the finite element tower model established using ANSYS. The effects of hill slope on the maximum displacement response of the tower are studied. The results show that the maximum value of the response is the largest when the hill slope is 25° compared to those when hill slope is 15° and 35°. The results extend the knowledge concerning wind tunnel tests on hills of different terrain and provide a comprehensive understanding of the interactive effects between the hill and existing transmission tower regarding to the wind field characteristics and structural dynamic responses.


Author(s):  
Wenhua Wang ◽  
Zhen Gao ◽  
Xin Li ◽  
Torgeir Moan ◽  
Bin Wang

In the last decade the wind energy industry has developed rapidly in China, especially offshore. For a water depth less than 20m, monopile and multi-pile substructures (tripod, pentapod) are applied widely in offshore wind farms. Some wind farms in China are located in high seismicity regions, thus, the earthquake load may become the dominant load for offshore wind turbines. This paper deals with the seismic behavior of an offshore wind turbine (OWT) consisting of the NREL 5MW baseline wind turbine, a pentapod substructure and a pile foundation of a real offshore wind turbine in China. A test model of the OWT is designed based on the hydro-elastic similarity. Test cases of different load combinations are performed with the environmental conditions generated by the Joint Earthquake, Wave and Current Simulation System and the Simple Wind Field Generation System at Dalian University of Technology, China, in order to investigate the structural dynamic responses under different load conditions. In the tests, a circular disk is used to model the rotor-nacelle system, and a force gauge is fixed at the center of the disk to measure the wind forces during the tests. A series of accelerometers are arranged along the model tower and the pentapod piles, and strain gauges glued on the substructure members are intended to measure the structural dynamic responses. A finite element model of the complete wind turbine is also established in order to compare the theoretical results with the test data. The hydro-elastic similarity is validated based on the comparison of the measured dynamic characteristics and the results of the prototype modal analysis. The numerical results agree well with the experimental data. Based on the comparisons of the results, the effect of the wind and sea loads on the structural responses subjected to seismic is demonstrated, especially the influence on the global response of the structure. It is seen that the effect of the combined seismic, wind, wave and current load conditions can not be simply superimposed. Hence the interaction effect in the seismic analysis should be considered when the wind, wave and current loads have a non-negligible effect.


Complexity ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiangying Guo ◽  
Pan Jiang ◽  
Dongxing Cao

Based on the structures of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) wings, nonlinear dynamic analysis of macrofiber composite (MFC) laminated shells is presented in this paper. The effects of piezoelectric properties and aerodynamic forces on the dynamic stability of the MFC laminated shell are studied. Firstly, under the flow condition of ideal incompressible fluid, the thin airfoil theory is employed to calculate the effects of the mean camber line to obtain the circulation distribution of the wings in subsonic air flow. The steady aerodynamic lift on UAV wings is derived by using the Kutta–Joukowski lift theory. Then, considering the geometric nonlinearity and piezoelectric properties of the MFC material, the nonlinear dynamic model of the MFC laminated shell is established with Hamilton’s principles and the Galerkin method. Next, the effects of electric field, external excitation force, and nonlinear parameters on the stability of the system are studied under 1 : 1 internal resonance and the effects of material parameters on the natural frequency of the structure are also analyzed. Furthermore, the influence of the aerodynamic forces and electric field on the nonlinear dynamic responses of MFC laminated shells is discussed by numerical simulation. The results indicate that the electric field and external excitation have great influence on the structural dynamic responses.


Author(s):  
Chao Tian ◽  
Xinyun Ni ◽  
Jun Ding ◽  
Peng Yang ◽  
Yousheng Wu

In order to explore the fishery, oil and gas, and tourism resources in the ocean, Very Large Floating Structures (VLFS) can be deployed near islands and reefs as a logistic base with various functions such as a floating harbor, accommodation, fishery processing, oil and gas exploration, environment surveillance, airplane landing and taking off, etc. However, in addition to the complicated hydroelastic coupling effects between the hydrodynamic loads and structural dynamic responses, when tackling the hydroelastic problems of floating structures deployed near islands and reefs, several other environmental effects and numerical techniques should be taken into account: 1) The influences of the non-uniform incident waves (multi-directions, different wave frequencies); 2) Complex seabed profile and its impact on the incident waves; 3) Nonlinear second order wave exciting forces in the complex mooring system, shallow water and coral reef geological conditions; 4) Parallel computing technology and fast solving methods for the large scale linear equations, accounting for the influence of dramatic increase of number of meshes to the computation efforts and efficiency. In the present paper the theoretical investigation on the hydroelastic responses of VLFS deployed near islands and reefs has been presented. In addition, based on the pulsating source Green function, the high performance parallel fast computing techniques and other numerical methods, in solving large scale linear equations, have been introduced in the three-dimensional hydroelastic analysis package THAFTS. The motions, wave loads, distortions and stresses can be calculated using the present theoretical model and the results can be used in the design and safety assessment of VLFS.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-20
Author(s):  
Sheng-Lan Ma ◽  
Shao-Fei Jiang ◽  
Chen Wu ◽  
Si-Yao Wu

The integration of discrete wavelet transform and independent component analysis (DWT-ICA) method can directly identify time-varying changes in linear structures. However, better metrics of structural seismic damage and future performance after an event are related to structural permanent and total plastic deformations. This study proposes a two-stage technique based on DWT-FastICA and improved multiparticle swarm coevolution optimization (IMPSCO) using a baseline nonlinear Bouc–Wen structural model to directly identify changes in stiffness caused by damage as well as plastic or permanent deflections. In the first stage, the measured structural dynamic responses are preprocessed firstly by DWT, and then the Fast ICA is used to extract the feature components that contain the damage information for the purpose of initially locating damage. In the second stage, the structural responses are divided at the identified damage instant into segments that are used to identify the time-varying physical parameters by using the IMPSCO, and the location and extent of damage can accordingly be identified accurately. The efficiency of the proposed method in identifying stiffness changes is assessed under different ground motions using a suite of two different ground acceleration records. Meanwhile, the effect of noise level and damage extent on the proposed method is also analyzed. The results show that in a realistic scenario with fixed filter tuning parameters, the proposed approach identifies stiffness changes within 1.25% of true stiffness within 8.96 s; therefore, it can work in real time. Parameters are identified within 14% of the actual as-modeled value using noisy simulation-derived structural responses. This indicates that, in accordance with different demands, the proposed method can not only locate and quantify damage within a short time with a high precision but also has excellent noise tolerance, robustness, and practicality.


2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 339-361
Author(s):  
Peng Chen ◽  
Jiahao Chen ◽  
Zhiqiang Hu

Abstract Due to the dissimilar scaling issues, the conventional experimental method of FOWTs can hardly be used directly to validate the full-scale global dynamic responses accurately. Therefore, it is of absolute necessity to find a more accurate, economic and efficient approach, which can be utilized to predict the full-scale global dynamic responses of FOWTs. In this paper, a literature review of experimental-numerical methodologies and challenges for FOWTs is made. Several key challenges in the conventional basin experiment issues are discussed, including scaling issues; coupling effects between aero-hydro and structural dynamic responses; blade pitch control strategies; experimental facilities and calibration methods. Several basin experiments, industrial projects and numerical codes are summarized to demonstrate the progress of hybrid experimental methods. Besides, time delay in hardware-in-the-loop challenges is concluded to emphasize their significant role in real-time hybrid approaches. It is of great use to comprehend these methodologies and challenges, which can help some future researchers to make a footstone for proposing a more efficient and functional hybrid basin experimental and numerical method.


2018 ◽  
Vol 140 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing Yang ◽  
Huajiang Ouyang ◽  
Dan Stancioiu ◽  
Shancheng Cao ◽  
Xuhui He

This paper presents an experimental and theoretical study of vibration of a four-span continuous plate with two rails on top and four extra supports excited by one or two moving model cars, which is meant to represent vehicle–track–bridge dynamic interaction. Measured natural frequencies of the plate structure are used to update the finite element (FE) model of the structure. Four laser displacement transducers are placed on the ground to measure the displacements of the plate. A laser-Doppler vibrometer is used to measure the real-time speed of the moving cars, which reveals that the speeds decrease with time at a small and almost constant deceleration which can affect the structural dynamic response. A fascinating experiment is the use of two cars connected in series, which is very rare and has never been done on a multispan structure. Vibration of the plate structure excited by two moving cars separated at a distance is also measured and exhibits interesting dynamic behavior too. A theoretical model of the whole structure is constructed and an iterative method is developed to determine the dynamic response. The numerical and the experimental results are found to agree very well, in particular when deceleration is considered in the theoretical model.


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